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Mental Health
Joint Strategic Needs Assessment
for Tower Hamlets
Part Two: Facts and Figures
August 2013
1
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 7 INVESTMENT IN MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES ………………………………………………………….2
1 Introduction……………………………………………………...………. 3 2 Total spend………………………..................................................... 4 3 Children and young people…………………………………………... 9 4 Adults of working age…………………………………………………. 9 5 Older people…………………………………………………….………..13 6 Prescribing……………………………………………………………….15
CHAPTER 8 SERVICE PROVISION AND UTILISATION ………………………………………………………………17
7 Structure and overview 17 8 Children and young people…………………………………..……… 19 9 Adults: primary mental health care services…………………..…. 28 10 Adults of working age: community mental health services…... 42 11 Adults of working age: inpatient services………………………... 69
12 Older adults…………………………………………………… ……… 89
2
7. Investment in mental health services
Summary of key points
Total spend
In summary, although the PCT spent between 11.4% and 14.3% of total
commissioning spend on mental health, DH Programme Budgeting suggests that
Tower Hamlets spends significantly less on mental health per capita than other
boroughs with comparable demography and comparable mental health need.
PCT spend
In 2011/12, approximately 11.4% of Tower Hamlets PCT spend was on mental
health. This includes the East London NHS Foundation Trust contract, third sector
mental health contracts, and specialist commissioning (but not the spend on mental
health services embedded in Barts Health CHS, Barts Health acute, and primary care
contracts.)
The proportion of PCT total spend committed to mental health reduced marginally
over the last three years, from 11.72% in 2010/11 to a projected 10.85% in 2012/13,
in the context of a 5.05% increase in total spend over the period.
The 2011/12 Programme Budgeting report notes that Tower Hamlets PCT spent
£76,530,406 on mental health, out of a total £541,795,000, or 14.3%. (It is important
to note that programme budgeting includes spend not accounted for in the data
above, including primary care prescribing costs, London Ambulance Service, acute
hospital treatment attributable to mental illness etc.)
Comparative spend
In comparison with seven London Centre ONS comparator boroughs (i.e. other
boroughs with comparable demography and comparable mental health need), Tower
Hamlets spent the lowest proportion on mental health in 2011/12, and also spent the
lowest per 100k population (according to NHS programme budgeting).
In 2011/12, Tower Hamlets spent a total of £54,402k on mental health services for
adults of working age (on secondary NHS services and local authority mental health
services, based on the annual finance mapping conducted on behalf of the
Department of Health). This approximately £60 per head less than the ONS group
average on mental health services for adults of working age, and in 2010/12 less
than both City & Hackney and Newham.
Specific budgets
In cash terms and as a proportion of its expenditure Tower Hamlets spent more on
non-statutory services than City & Hackney and Newham in 2011/12.
Out of a total commissioning spend of £69,932k, the Council spent £10,217k, or
14.61% on mental health services for adults of working age during 2011/12. (This
3
represents commissioning spend only, and excludes £3,506,628 (2010/11 spend) on
directly provided services, such as social work and in-house day care.)
Tower Hamlets now appears to spend in line with ONS comparators on older people
(on secondary NHS services and local authority mental health services, based on the
annual finance mapping conducted on behalf of the Department of Health).
In 2010/11, Tower Hamlets spent below average in London on primary care
prescribing for depressive disorders per 100,000 population (which contrasts with the
volume of prescribing reported in the chapter on service utilisation), but well above
average on primary care prescribing for psychotic disorders per 100,000 population.
More detailed analysis of spend by service line is not sufficiently robust to contribute
to strategic planning.
1. Introduction
This chapter gives details of current and historic investment into mental health services in
Tower Hamlets, both by the NHS and the Council.
There are several sources of information that can help to build a picture of how the NHS and
Council spend their money on mental health services, as detailed below:
Programme Budgeting1: PCT’s have historically completed annual programme
budgeting returns to the Department of Health which detail spend by programme of
activity, of which mental health is one. The information available is high level, but it
enables comparison of spend by programme across PCT’s, standardised by
weighted population. The programme budgeting data should be viewed with some
caution because different PCT’s may ascribe spend to programmes differently, and
spend on health services which are general in nature, but may include mental health
specific activity, for example primary care, is not disaggregated into programme
spend
Local Implementation Team Finance Mapping2: The PCT and Council have
historically completed Local Implementation Team (LIT) Finance Mapping for mental
health services for adults of working age, and mental health services for older
people. The LIT Finance Mapping allows for some drill down into spend against
specific service lines, and some comparison across boroughs. The LIT Finance
Mapping data should be viewed with some caution, because different borough
partnerships may complete the mapping differently dependent on information that is
available, for example some partnerships disaggregate social care spend on older
people with mental health problems from general social care commissioning for older
people, whilst other partnerships are not able to do this.
1 http://www.networks.nhs.uk/nhs-networks/health-investment-network/news/2011-12-programme-
budgeting-data-now-available 2 https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/investment-in-mental-health-in-2011-to-2012-working-age-
adults-and-older-adults
4
Local commissioning financial information: Spend is available from local PCT
and Council accounts and financial management processes, however this does not
allow for comparison across boroughs
Prescribing data via E-PACT: high level spend is available on prescribing, but detail
is very limited.
As the information collected through each of the reports identified above is collected
and presented differently, they do not always clearly align. Whilst collectively they
can help to build a picture of how NHS and Council resources are deployed, it is
important, as a consequence, to consider this chapter as a guide, rather than as a
definitive statement on actual distribution of spend. However, more detailed analysis
of spend by service line is not yet sufficiently robust to contribute to strategic
planning.
Over the coming year, the NHS will be preparing for the introduction of a tariff based
system of reimbursement into mental health. Payment by Results in mental health is not
the same as payment by results for acute hospital activity, it will reimburse mental health
trusts for periods of care and treatment similar to the year of care tariffs being developed
for long term conditions, rather than for discrete episodes of treatment.
As a consequence of the introduction of PBR in mental health, how NHS resources are
deployed in mental health will become much clearer in the future.
2. Total spend
In 2011/12, approximately 11.4% of Tower Hamlets PCT spend was on mental health.
This includes the East London NHS Foundation Trust contract, third sector mental health
contracts, and specialist commissioning. It does not include primary care psychology
(Community Health Services), or some mental health and health psychology services at
the Royal London Hospital (acute) or mental health assessment and treatment provided
primary care (direct commissioning), since spend on these services is embedded in
Barts Health CHS, Barts Health acute, and primary care contracts.
5
The proportion of PCT total spend committed to mental health has reduced marginally over
the last three years, from 11.72% in 2010/11 to a projected 10.85% in 2012/13, in the
context of a 5.05% increase in total spend over the period:
The 2011/12 Programme Budgeting report notes that Tower Hamlets PCT spent
£76,530,406 on mental health, out of a total £541,795,000, or 14.3%. It is important to note
that programme budgeting includes spend not accounted for in the data above, including
primary care prescribing costs, London Ambulance Service, acute hospital treatment
attributable to mental illness etc.
£51,289
£193,694
£65,780
£20,466
£19,744
£42,577
£58,445
2011/12 PCT spend by service area
Mental Health
Acute
Community Health Services
Non Acute
Specialist Commissioning
Non Core Primary Care Services(including prescribing)
Direct Commissioning
0.00%5.00%
10.00%15.00%20.00%25.00%30.00%35.00%40.00%45.00%50.00%
10-11 Actual as a % ofTotal budget
11-12 Actual as a % ofTotal budget
12-13 Actual as a % ofTotal budget
6
In comparison with the 7 London Centre ONS comparator boroughs3, Tower Hamlets spent
the lowest proportion on mental health in 2011/12:
Tower Hamlets also spent the lowest per 100k population:
3 Tower Hamlets is grouped in programme budgeting with “London Centre” boroughs, as having comparable
populations and therefore health need, including Westminster, Camden, Islington, Kensington & Chelsea, Wandsworth and Hammersmith and Fulham. Whilst some of the London Centre boroughs are known to have comparatively high levels of mental health need, for example Camden and Islington, there are other London boroughs, such as Hackney and Lambeth, where need may be more in line with Tower Hamlets than other London Centre boroughs. It should also be noted that the demographic profile, particularly around age and ethnicity, varies significantly across the London Centre boroughs, with Tower Hamlets having a particularly high BME population.
£0
£20,000,000
£40,000,000
£60,000,000
£80,000,000
£100,000,000
£120,000,000
2011/12 Programme Budgeting spend by category
14.13% 14.61% 14.61% 15.74% 18.47% 18.49% 19.06%
0.00%
5.00%
10.00%
15.00%
20.00%
25.00%
% of total NHS programme spend on mental health 2011-12
7
Tower Hamlets was 15th nationally for spend on mental health per 100k population in
2011/12:
£27.422 £28.241 £29.545 £30.575
£36.449 £36.658 £39.451
£0.000£5.000
£10.000£15.000£20.000£25.000£30.000£35.000£40.000£45.000
Spend per 100K pop'n (£m)
£0.000£5.000
£10.000£15.000£20.000£25.000£30.000£35.000£40.000£45.000
Spend per 100K pop'n (£m)
8
Despite being lowest for per capita investment of ONS comparator PCT’s, over the lifetime
of the National Service Framework for Mental Health, Tower Hamlets PCT has invested
significantly into mental health services, with year on year increases in the value of the
contract significantly in excess of inflation4. There was a 0.61% reduction between 2011/12
and 2012/13, which was a common picture nationally5:
4 It is not possible at this point in time to disaggregate spend within the mental health contract to CAMHS,
adults of working age or older people, since the costs of these service lines are all included in the general contract baseline. It is anticipated that during 2013/14, ELFT will work with commissioners to identify clear service line costs. 5 http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/aug/07/mental-health-spending-falls
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1st quintile 2nd quintile
3rd quintile 4th quintile
5th quintile Tower Hamlets PCT
PCTs within selected cluster level ONS Cluster average
0.00%
5.00%
10.00%
15.00%
20.00%
25.00%
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% change in value ofELFT contract
Retail Price Index
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3. Children and young people
There are no national sources of data available to benchmark spend on children and young
people’s services, other than NHS spend through programme budgeting. In 2011/12, Tower
Hamlets reported £2.261m spend on CAMHS services, however this is not disaggregated in
the baseline of the main ELFT contract. It should be noted that the Council invests in ELFT
CAMHS services, outside of the main contract, and that there was a reduction in Council
spend due to a reduction in area based grant in 2011/12.
4. Adults of working age
The LIT Finance Mapping returns, for which local information is available across City &
Hackney, Newham, and Tower Hamlets, and provides a breakdown of health and social care
spend on mental health services for adults of working age. In 2011/12, Tower Hamlets LIT
spent a total of £54,402k, under the following categories of spend:
£1.632 £1.896 £2.054 £2.261
£2.919 £2.990 £3.052
£0.000£0.500£1.000£1.500£2.000£2.500£3.000£3.500
Spend per 100K pop'n (£m) on CAMHS services 2011/12
10
Compared to City & Hackney and Newham, total spend, and spend per capita against
weighted population are as detailed below:
£4,889
£10,927
£259
£7,450
£7,076
£1,575 £136
£1,842
£534
£2,205
£782
£1,093
£3,351
£8,403
£1,112
£198 £366
£3,732
2011/12 spend
Access & Crisis Services
Accommodation
Carers Services
Clinical services
CMHTs
Continuing care
Direct Payments
Employment/Day/Resource
Home Support Services
Other Community & Hospital
Personality Disorder Services
Psychological therapies (IAPT)
Psychological therapies (non IAPT)
Secure and High Dependency
Support Services
Services for Mentally Disordered Offenders
Capital charges
Indirect costs
£73,665
£43,706
£54,402
£69,330
£51,125 £54,981
£65,912
£51,152 £55,929
£0
£10,000
£20,000
£30,000
£40,000
£50,000
£60,000
£70,000
£80,000
Cit
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New
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Tow
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New
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Tow
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Ham
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2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
LIT investment total
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Compared to ONS comparator groups, Tower Hamlets spends roughly £60 per head less
than the ONS group average on mental health services for adults of working age.
In 2011/12, against specific categories of spend, Tower Hamlets spends less per head than
ONS comparators (with the exception of accommodation, which includes residential care),
City & Hackney and Newham (although it should be noted that there is significant variability
in how LIT’s record spend against categories, so this should in no way be taken as anything
other than a very broad guide):
£252
£142 £167 £208 £227
£175 £155 £212 £216
£175 £158 £207
£0£50
£100£150£200£250£300
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Tow
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Lon
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2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
Weighted investment per head for LIT
£2
52
£1
42
£1
67
£2
27
£1
75
£1
55
£2
16
£1
75
£1
58
£2
13
£2
13
£2
27
£2
20
£2
20
£2
20
£2
08
£2
08
£2
08
£0
£50
£100
£150
£200
£250
£300
Cit
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New
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Tow
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Ham
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Cit
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New
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Tow
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Ham
lets
Cit
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New
ham
Tow
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Ham
lets
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
Weighted investment per headfor LIT
Weighted investment per headfor ONS cluster group
12
0.00%
5.00%
10.00%
15.00%
20.00%
25.00%
LIT
ONS
£0£5
£10£15£20£25£30£35£40£45
City & Hackney
Newham
Tower Hamlets
13
Finance mapping suggests that spend by provider type is distributed as below:
Out of a total commissioning spend of £69,932k, the Council spent £10,217k, or 14.61% on
mental health services for adults of working age during 2011/12. This represents
commissioning spend only, and excludes £3,506,628 (2010/11 spend) on directly provided
services, such as social work and in-house day care.
5. Older people
The LIT Finance Mapping returns, for which local information is available across City &
Hackney, Newham, and Tower Hamlets, provides a breakdown of health and social care
spend on mental health services for older people. However spend on older people should be
considered with extreme caution, since different local authorities in particular account for
£42,750
£32,775 £34,331
£9,828 £8,469
£14,180
£6,425
£0
£3,320
£0
£5,000
£10,000
£15,000
£20,000
£25,000
£30,000
£35,000
£40,000
£45,000
City & Hackney Newham Tower Hamlets
NHS
Non-statutory
Social Services
0
5,000,000
10,000,000
15,000,000
20,000,000
25,000,000
30,000,000
Adultmentalhealth
Learningdisability
Physicaldisability
HIV Olderpeople
Gross
Net
14
spend on older people with mental health problems differently. For example, some
authorities disaggregate their spend on older people with mental health problems from
general older peoples commissioning spend, whilst others do not, and therefore do not
include it in LIT returns (for example spend on residential care). In 2011/12, Tower Hamlets
LIT spent a total of £10,025k, a significant increase from 2009/10:
Compared to City & Hackney and Newham, and ONS comparators, spend per head against
weighted population are as detailed below. Tower Hamlets now appears to spend in line with
ONS comparators on older people (although the ONS per capita spend appears to drop
significantly for the Tower Hamlets ONS cluster group between 2010/11 to 2011/12, which
may be due to a change in the ONS cluster grouping.
£7,093
£12,034
£8,360 £7,756
£11,232 £9,071
£6,564
£16,726
£10,025
£0£2,000£4,000£6,000£8,000
£10,000£12,000£14,000£16,000£18,000
Cit
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Tow
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Cit
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New
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Tow
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Ham
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Cit
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New
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Tow
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Ham
lets
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
LIT investment total
£189
£317 £240
£204
£300 £265
£173
£447
£293
£0£50
£100£150£200£250£300£350£400£450£500
Cit
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New
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Tow
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New
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Tow
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New
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Tow
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2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
Weighted investment per head for LIT
15
6. Prescribing
In 2010/11, Tower Hamlets spent below average in London on primary care prescribing for
depressive disorders per 100,000 population:
But well above average on primary care prescribing for psychotic disorders per 100,000
population:
£1
89
£3
17
£2
40
£2
04
£3
00
£2
65
£1
73
£4
47
£2
93
£2
51
£2
51
£4
40
£2
74
£2
74
£4
12
£2
76
£2
76
£2
76
£0
£50
£100
£150
£200
£250
£300
£350
£400
£450
£500
Cit
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New
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Tow
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Cit
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New
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Tow
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Ham
lets
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
Weighted investment per headfor LIT
Weighted investment per headfor ONS cluster group
16
7. Summary
In summary, although the PCT spent between 11.4% and 14.3% of total commissioning
spend on mental health, DH Programme Budgeting suggests that Tower Hamlets spends
significantly less on mental health per capita than other boroughs with comparable
demography and comparable mental health need.
17
Chapter 8: Service provision and utilisation
This chapter is arranged as follows:
1. Service provision and utilisation overview (page 18)
2. Children and Young People (page 19)
2.1 Description of service provision
2.2 Educational Psychology Service
2.3 Community services
2.4 Inpatient services
2.5 Summary of utilisation of CAMHS services
3. Adults: primary care mental health services (page 28)
3.1 Description of service provision
3.2 How Tower Hamlets compares with other boroughs for primary care mental health
3.3 Utilisation of local IAPT services
3.4 Summary of utilisation of primary care mental health services
4. Adults of working age: community mental health services (page 42)
4.1 Description of service provision
4.2 Comparisons with community mental health services in other boroughs
4.3 Referrals to community services: analysis of local data
4.4 Social care
4.5 Voluntary sector utilisation
4.6 Offenders and mental health
4.7 Substance misuse 4.8 Summary of utilisation of secondary community services
5. Adults of working age: inpatient services (page 69)
5.1 Description of Service provision
5.2 Number and rate of admission and comparisons with other areas?
5.3 Emergency response services: A& E and ambulance
5.4 Inpatient services for adults; local data
5.5 Summary of service utilisation for adult inpatient services
6. Older adults (page 89)
6.1 Description of service provision
4.2 Primary mental health care service utilisation
6.3 Mental health services for older people
6.4 Inpatient services for older people
6.5 Summary of older adult service utilisation
18
1. Service provision and utilisation overview
Commissioners of services need to have accurate data about the number of people using
mental health services in order to plan effectively for future provision. This chapter:
Describes at the service provision across the life course and the mental health
system in Tower Hamlets
Looks at how Tower Hamlets compares to other places with regards to key mental
health indicators/outcome measures for adult services (similar comparisons are not
available for other age groups)
Sets out what is known about local primary, community and inpatient care services
from local information available.
The structure of the chapter broadly follows the life course approach, i.e. services for
children and young people, adults and older adults, in that order.
The following diagram illustrates the volume of activity (per year) in primary care (green) and
secondary care (blue).
Figure 1: Illustration of Tower Hamlets mental health service system with annual activity
19
The local data used in this section is taken from a series of bespoke datasets provided to the
joint CCG/LB TH mental health strategy team from ELFT via a formal data request. The data
covers two to four full years (according to service) and part of the most recent year 2012/13.
2. Children and Young People
This section provides a service overview and reports activity by the Educational Psychology
Service and the utilisation of community child and adolescent mental health services
(CAMHS) and CAMHS inpatient services in Tower Hamlets, analysed by age, referral
source, length of time in contact with the service, and ethnicity. There is limited data
available about other services.
2.1 Description of CAMHS service provision
In common with all areas, Tower Hamlets has a range of services, delivered by partners
across the statutory and voluntary sectors, to support the emotional and mental health of
children and young people in Tower Hamlets. Together they are intended to form a
comprehensive spectrum of support, usually described as four tiers:
Universal CAMHS (Tier 1) coverage includes services whose primary function is not
mental health care e.g. primary care, schools and social services.
Targeted CAMHS (Tier 2) is intended for children and/or families with needs that are
more intensive and/or more complex than those that can be accommodated within
universal services. These needs require additional specific support to prevent them from
escalating or to prevent external factors having a serious negative impact on children’s
abilities. Targeted support for families can include interventions which vary in their level
of intensity and complexity.
Specialist CAMHS (Tier 3) services are for children and/or families whose difficulties
have caused significant adverse effects or poor outcomes and need specialist multi-
disciplinary support to address their needs.
A further enhanced and highly specialised tier of health services, (Tier 4) is provided to
children and adolescents with severe and/or complex mental health problems and risk
behaviours through in-patient, day patient or outpatient.
Specialist CAMHS input to Tier 2 is provided by East London Foundation Trust (ELFT) in a
number of ways, summarised as follows:
Weekly input into three schools, and once or twice termly in five schools, with input
actively being planned into two others and the Pupil Referral Unit
Weekly or fortnightly sessions in nine children’s centres
Consultation, teaching, training, group work and supervision in a number of settings
for Looked After Children, multidisciplinary teams and other programmes.
Other Tier 2 services are the Educational Psychology Service (described below) and a
disability outreach service funded by the council. It is likely that some schools also make
their own arrangements for Tier 2 input.
20
In Tower Hamlets a specialist (Tier 3) CAMHS service is provided by ELFT through two
sectors, West and East. They are both based at Greatorex Street with some East sessions
taking place at the Emanuel Miller Centre for Families and Children in Gill Street.
A paediatric liaison service (also provided by ELFT) serves young people who experience
psychological difficulties adjusting to, and managing medical conditions such as fits,
diabetes, skin problems or stomach problems, or who have experienced trauma as a result
of an accident. The service assesses young people who have presented at the hospital
having self-harmed or attempted suicide.
(There is also a specialist NHS treatment service provided in Tower Hamlets by ELFT for
young people under 19 years who have serious and complex drug and/or alcohol problems,
but activity is not analysed in this JSNA).
Inpatient or Tier 4 services for young people in Tower Hamlets are provided at the Coborn
Centre for Adolescent Mental Health, a hospital centre in Newham treating young people
with acute and severe forms of mental illness. These include major mood disorders,
psychosis, severe obsessive compulsive disorder, eating disorders and some emerging
personality disorders. It helps young people through the most acute phase of their difficulties
and aims to reintegrate them back into their communities as soon as they are ready. The
Coborn Centre has a psychiatric intensive care unit (PICU), an acute admission service and
a day hospital. A pharmacy service for CAMHS is based there.
2.2 Educational Psychology Service6 (EPS) - Early Intervention Work in Children’s
Centres
Over the twelve month snapshot period, a total of 124 families were supported7 and 252
home visits carried out8. For both quarters, the highest number of family support and home
visits were carried out in the Bangladeshi ethnic group (38-45% of total visits). The second
highest number of visits and support were with families in the White English ethnic group
(20-26% of total visits). For Q2, 20 children had some kind of special educational need or
disability. For Q3, 22 children had some kind of special educational need or disability. Most
improvement was shown in how concerned parents are about their children’s behaviour after
the intervention i.e. parents were significantly less concerned about their children’s
behaviour9.
6Snapshot period: 01/09/11 – 31/08/12
Note: that this is one component of the educational psychology work – other areas include support to parents of disabled children, support to the pupil referral unit 7Target: To support at least 3 families via each of the 12 Community Hubs – a target of 36 families receiving
support each quarter 8Report highlights snapshot data from: 1
st August 2011 to 31
st Jan 2012 (Q2 & Q3 2011/12)
9For both quarters, of the 77 families worked with in the quarter, 24 pre and post intervention evaluation
forms have been completed
21
Table 1: EPS report summary 01/09/11 – 31/08/12
Service utilisation Activity
Total numbers of cases by gender
Female: 154
Male: 308
Total number: 462
Statemented (that means the child
already had a statement of Special
Educational Needs or SEN)
61 cases
Active Involvement 236 cases
Ethnicity Highest proportions of cases were:
50% Bangladeshi
17% English White
Presenting need Speech & language – 112 cases
General – 102 cases
Behaviour, Emotional & Social
Development – 81 cases
Age (School Year) Years covered: Under 5 to Year 11
Highest proposition of cases were in the
following school year: Under 5 (27%),
Nursery (11%) and Year 2 (11%)
2.3 Secondary care – community CAMHS
CAMHS activity in this section is taken from a dataset covering three years and eight
months10. It covers referrals, waiting times, age, ethnicity and time on community caseload.
Number of referrals to community CAMHS
The following table shows the total referrals to community CAMHS service operated by
ELFT.
10
In the period under review (from April 2009-November 2013), 96.1% (5,841/6,076) of all community referrals to ELFT CAMHS services had a commissioner of Tower Hamlets PCT. (The remaining referrals were made up of a range of other commissioners.) The analysis is based on a baseline figure of 5,386 external community referrals for Tower Hamlets residents. The balance of 455 referrals were internal referrals (within ELFT) and have not been analysed except where shown.
22
Table 2: Referrals to ELFT community CAMHS 2009/13
CAMHS 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
2012/13 Pro-rated
Number of Community Referrals
1,728
1,641
1,604
1,302 Source: data analysed by TH CCG. Includes external and internal referrals – internal referrals not reported until 2012/13.
This shows that referrals have fallen slightly over the past three years, with a bigger fall
projected for 2012/13.
The top ten sources of community referrals for CAMHS between 2009/10 and 2012/13 are
as follows:
Figure 2: Top 10 sources of external community referrals between 2009/2010-2012/201311
Source: East London Foundation Trust
The highest number of community referrals (1,720) come from GP practices (both those
coded as ‘GP ‘and ‘GMP’), followed by hospital services (738 and 623). There are not as
many referrals from schools as might be expected (183, plus 112 from education), given that
schools are well placed to identify emerging difficulties.
With references to waiting times, contract monitoring reports show that:
All referrals were seen within 11 weeks for treatment. (Contract reports do not give
separate bands within the 11 weeks, showing time waiting.)
11
Until November 2013
23
Monthly DNA (i.e. did not attend appointment) rates from May 2012 to February 2013
were consistently between 25 and 30%.
These indicators deserve further investigation, since they could indicate shortcomings in
access.
The following figures shows the age children and young people referred to community
CAMHS by 5-year age band.
Figure 3: Proportion of community referrals for CAMHS by 5 year age bands
Source: East London Foundation Trust dataset analysed for TH CCG
This shows a fall in the referrals of children aged 0-4, and a slight increase in the 5-9 and 10-
14 year age groups.
The following table shows the percentage of the child and adolescent population (up to and
including age 17.
Table 3: Population of Tower Hamlets aged 0 to 17 by age band and percentage
Age band (Years)
0 to 4 5 to 9
10 to 14
15 to 17
Percentage 34.0 28.2 24.0 13.8
Source: 2011 census
The service activity in each banding does not reflect the proportions in the population, but is
likely to reflect the age at which concerns arise and lead to referral.
The following figure shows the proportion of referrals by major ethnic group.
0-4 5-9 10-14 Over 15
2009/10 14.8% 21.1% 34.8% 29.3%
2010/11 13.7% 24.3% 34.2% 27.8%
2011/12 12.8% 25.6% 36.3% 25.3%
2012/13 9.2% 25.7% 37.3% 27.8%
0%5%
10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%50%
Proportion of Community Referrals for CAMHS by 5 year Age-Bands
24
Figure 4: Proportion of community referrals for CAMHS by major ethnic groups
Source: East London Foundation Trust dataset analysed for TH CCG
This shows that (disregarding the part-year 2012/13 due to the high level of ‘Unknown/not
stated’):
• ‘Asian, Asian British - Bangladeshi’ is highest category in community CAMHS
referrals over that period (at 32-37%)
• Use by the white British population is stable
• Only the ‘Other ethnic groups’ reporting category varied by more than 5% in the
period 2009-12 - an increasing trend.
The 0 – 15 age group in the borough comprises 57% per cent children of Bangladeshi origin,
compared to 15 per cent children of white British origin (2011 census). Bangladeshi
residents are therefore under-represented, and other ethnic groups over-represented.
NB. The ‘Black or Black British-Caribbean’ census category accounted for 2.1% of the
population in 2011 (all ages) and there were an insignificant number of CAMHS referrals in
this age group (rising to 2% of adult referrals and 3% of adult admissions). The numbers
involved are too small to permit firm conclusions from data analysis.
The length of time on the caseload of CAMHS services has been analysed, showing the
average for each year of those discharged in that year. The following figure shows the trend.
23%
37%
0%
26%
13%
26%
37%
0%
27%
10%
24%
32%
0%
34%
10% 12%
31%
0%
14%
43%
0%5%
10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%50%
White -British
Asian or AsianBritish -
Bangladeshi
Black or BlackBritish -
Caribbean
All other EthnicGroups
Not Stated/Unknown
Proportion of Community Referrals for CAMHS by Major Ethnic Groups
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
25
Figure 5: Average length on community caseload (CAMHS)
Source: East London Foundation Trust
The following table shows the average length of stay for each year.
Table 4: Average length on community caseload (CAMHS)
Average Length
on caseload
12 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
CAMHS - 956 601 494 347
There are some outliers in the dataset that slightly skews the data, but in general the
average length of time on community CAMHS caseload appears to be significantly dropping,
i.e. it has more than halved. This is likely to indicate changes in the way in which the service
is managed.
12
The length on caseload is calculated on total discharges in that financial year (average length calculated by days between trust referral date and discharge date)
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
Average Length on Community Caseload (CAMHS)
CAMHS
26
2.4 Children and Young People admissions to inpatient services (Tier 4 CAMHS)
During the period April 2008-October 2012 there were 86 inpatient admissions coded as
CAMHS. These 86 admissions were made up of 74 unique patients. All admissions were
aged between 12-17 years with the average age of 16.
Of these admissions 54.7% were female and 42.3% male. Of these, 45 (52%) were not
previously known to ELFT, and 34 of the 45 not previously known were of Asian or Asian
British-Bangladeshi Origin (76%). Analysis of the ethnicity of inpatient admission is shown in
the following figure, although some caution must be exercised due to the small number.
Figure 6: Proportion of CAMHS inpatient admissions by gender
This shows 62% of CAMHS inpatient admissions were Asian or Asian British-Bangladeshi
young people – nearly twice the level of community referrals
There were a total of 89 discharges in the same time period relating to 71 unique patients.
The following figure shows the number and sex of those admitted each year.
17%
62%
0% 19%
2% 0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
White - British Asian or AsianBritish -
Bangladeshi
Black or BlackBritish - Caribbean
All Other EthnicGroups
NonStated/Unknown
Proportion of CAMHS inpatient admissions by ethnicity Apr-08 to Oct-12
27
Figure 7: Trend of CAMHS inpatient discharges 2008 - 2013
The following table shows the average length of inpatient stay.
Figure 8: Trend in CAMHS inpatient discharges average length of stay 2008-201313
The average length of stay14 has significantly reduced since 2008/09. Since 2009/10 apart
from 2011/12 average LOS seems to range between 44 – 51 days.
13
The average for the available data has been used 14
Discharge date – admissions date
11 7
15
4
17
9 11
5
11
10 20
18 20
15
27
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
CAMHS Inpatient Discharges
Male
Female
Grand Total
112
46 44
82
51
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13
CAMHS Inpatient Discharges Average Length of Stay
28
2.5 Summary of utilisation of CAMHS
There is little data regularly collected about the use of community services for this
age group other than for specialist CAMHS
Referrals to CAMHS have fallen slightly over the past three years to about 1,600 per
year, with a bigger fall projected for 2012/13
The Educational Psychology Service had 462 cases in a recent snapshot year (about
half Bangladeshi), with 234 regularly supported. 124 families received support and
received 252 home visits, with two in five to families of Bangladeshi origin
The highest number of community referrals comes from GP practices, followed by
hospital services. There are not as many referrals from schools as might be
expected, given that schools are well placed to identify emerging difficulties.
One third of specialist CAMHS referrals are aged 10 to 14. In the last three and a half
years, there has been a fall in referrals of children aged 0-4, and a slight increase in
the 5-9 and 10-14 year age groups
The service sees all non-urgent referrals within 11 weeks
The rate of children and young people who do not attend appointments (DNA) is very
high - between 25 and 30% per month in most months in 2012/13
The average length of time on the specialist CAMHS community caseload has more
than halved. This is likely to indicate changes in the way in which the service is
managed
‘Asian, Asian British - Bangladeshi’ is highest category in community CAMHS
referrals over that period (at 32-37%) but is nevertheless under-represented in terms
of the population of the borough in that age group (50% Bangladeshi)
For inpatient services, the average length of stay has significantly reduced since
2008/09. However, the finding of a relatively high proportion of admissions from the
Bangladeshi community requires further consideration.
3 Adults: primary care mental health
This section describes current provision, compares Tower Hamlets with other London
Boroughs, analyses local utilization data and provides a summary at the end.
3.1 Description of service provision in primary care
Tower Hamlets has 36 general practices, one of which was set up for homeless people. The
borough and the GP practices are divided into eight networks. These are shown in the
following figure, which retains the now superseded labels for LAPs (or Local Area
Partnerships).
29
Figure 9: General practices in Tower hamlets mapped against former Local Area Partnerships
Primary care mental health services on the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies
(IAPT) national stepped care model are provided for Tower Hamlets by a third sector
organisation Compass (Tower Hamlets Community Health Services). It is based at Steel’s
Lane Health Centre in Bethnal Green but sees patients in GP practices across the borough.
In the following tables in section 3.3, data from this provider is labelled ‘Adult Psychology
Service’.
3.2 How Tower Hamlets compares to other boroughs for primary mental health
care for adults
This section compares primary care mental health provision with other London Borough
according outputs using a data analysis tool being developed for NHS England London.
These cover GP assessment and case finding for depression, the performance of IAPT
services and one prescribing measure for depression.
30
Referral data from the current service in Tower Hamlets is then analysed by number, source,
level of stepped care, age, gender and ethnicity.
GP assessment of depression in primary care
Most people who experience depression are managed in primary care by their GP. The
following figure shows the percentage of patients with a new diagnosis of depression who
have an assessment of severity 2 to 12 weeks after diagnosis.
Figure 10: Percentage of patients with a new diagnosis of depression with an assessment of
severity after 2 -12 weeks (London, 2011/12)
Source: Common Mental Health Disorders Needs Assessment Service and Financial Profiling or CMHD Tool) based on QOF
data Red line – London mean
This shows that GPs in Tower Hamlets perform the third worst in London against this
measure (the position on the measure for an assessment of severity at treatment outset is
similar – fourth worst in London.) It should be noted that there is a higher percentage of
patients in Tower Hamlets (than the London average) who are excluded from these
measures of follow-up according to criteria set out in the Quality and Outcomes Framework
(QOF).
The following figure shows the percentage of patients with two long-term conditions (who are
at greater risk of depression) for whom case-finding for depression has been undertaken.
31
Figure 11: Percentage of patient on the diabetes and/or the coronary heart disease (CHD)
register for whom case finding has been undertaken during the preceding 15 months (London,
2011/12)
Source: Common Mental Health Disorders Needs Assessment Service and Financial Profiling Tool}) Red line – London mean
This shows that GPs in Tower Hamlets perform well against this measure, at the second
highest percentage in London.
Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT): comparison with London
Please note that overall reporting data on IAPT includes all ages. Additional information on
local IAPT utilisation by older adults is included in section 6 below.
IAPT is a national NHS programme offering interventions, approved by the National Institute
of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), for treating people with depression and anxiety
disorders15. A central performance monitoring process takes place to identify those areas
where further improvement is needed. Tower Hamlets performs significantly better than
England when it comes to measuring against the indicator for the proportion of referrals that
enter treatment 69.8 per 100,000 compared to 60.1 per 100,000 (London rate = 59.2 per
100,000). The following table shows this indicator expressed as a percentage for London
boroughs.
15
The second phase of this programme was signalled by the publication of ‘Talking Therapies: a four year plan of action’ in February 2011
32
Figure 12: Number of people entering IAPT services: People entering IAPT services as a
percentage of those estimated to have anxiety/depression
Source: NHS Information Centre IAPT KPIs (CMHD tool indicator SP109)
Red line – London mean
This shows that the numbers of people entering IAPT services as a percentage of those
estimated to have anxiety/depression is the third highest in London. The following figure
shows the reported completion rates.
Figure 13: Completion of IAPT treatment: Rate per 100,000 weighted population over 18
Source: NHS Information Centre IAPT KPIs (CMHD tool indicator SP108) Red line –
London mean
33
Against this measure, Tower Hamlets is performing lower both than the London average and
than most others boroughs in the same cohort16 . Therefore, it appears that while people are
entering treatment, they may not be completing or reporting completion. It would be useful to
look at the attrition rates locally, and compare this to local data. The following figure shows
the proportion of people ‘moving to recovery’ (i.e. those who have completed treatment, who
at initial assessment achieved ’caseness’ and at final session did not).
Figure 14: Rate of recovery: Proportion of people who are ‘moving to recovery’ of those who
have completed treatment
Source: NHS Information Centre IAPT KPIs (MH tool indicator QP106)
This shows that the IAPT service in Tower Hamlets performs above the average against this
measure. The performance in terms of clients who move off benefits is shown in the
following figure.
16
The cohort used for comparators are Islington, Haringey, Hackney, Newham, Waltham Forest and Barking & Dagenham
34
Figure 15: Percentage of people completing IAPT treatment who have moved off sick pay or ill-
health related benefits, 2011/1217
Source: NHS Information Centre IAPT KPIs (MH tool indicator QP107) Red line – London
mean
Tower Hamlets is one of the lowest performers in London at 3.2%18. However, when
compared to Newham, it can be seen that there is only a loose relationship between the
above two indicators, so that Newham and Tower Hamlets have very similar (and above
average) scores for ‘moving to recovery’, they are at opposite ends of the spectrum for the
proportion moving off sick pay and benefits. The poor performance in coming off benefits is
likely to be related to the rate of long-term unemployment in Tower Hamlets, shown in
Chapter 2 to be the second highest in London.
Service utilisation primary care can also be measured by examining the number of
prescriptions issues for anti-depressant medication (as defined in BNF 4.3). Comparison
with other London CCGs is shown in the following table.
17
Please note: the graph has an error and should not include ‘Adolescent mental health community attendance’ 18
It should be noted that the measuring of outcomes is relatively new and data should be investigated further before any robust conclusions are drawn
35
Figure 16: Primary care prescribing of antidepressant drugs by borough, 2011/1219
Source: NHS London (CMHD tool indicators SP105) Red line – London mean
Tower Hamlets is the second-highest CCG in London in terms of the volume of anti-
depressant prescribing. Further work needs to be done to understand the reasons for this
finding.
3.3 Utilisation of local IAPT services from locally analysed data
The total number of referrals in Tower Hamlets made to the IAPT service over the period
April 2010 to January 2013 was a total of 13,99220. This is broken down as below:
19
Average daily quantity represents the assumed average maintenance dose per day for a drug used for its main indication in adults. STAR PU includes weighting for age and sex. Sutton Borough and Merton Borough have each been assigned the value for Sutton and Merton PCT. The value for Hackney Borough is that of City & Hackney PCT 20
This was for 10 months activity in 2012/13 and where needed the figures have been pro-rated to reflect full year effect
36
Figure 17: Number of referrals made to primary care mental health services 2010/13
Source: Adult Psychology service data, 2013
GP referrals make up the vast proportion of referrals, although it was not possible to
ascertain the exact proportion of GP referrals from the data supplied. Self-referrals are small,
but growing from 4.7% in 2010/11 to 9.6% in 2012/13.
Of those referred, there is a fall in the numbers of cases taken on over the past 3 years. This
has fallen from 42% (10/11), to 39% (11/12) to 33% in 12/13.
The relatively low rates of acceptance for treatment, and the rates of completion (compared
to London, as shown earlier) are said by the provider to be related to the level of complexity
and severity of those being referred. Referrals who require treatment by secondary care
would not be taken on for treatment by IAPT, but would still be counted as referrals. The
following diagram shows the number of cases taken on by ‘step’ of treatment within the
stepped care model (so that the higher the step the greater the complexity.)
4592
5079 5101
4300
4400
4500
4600
4700
4800
4900
5000
5100
5200
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13(pro-rated)
Number of Referrals
Number of Referrals
37
Figure 18: Cases taken on for treatment by primary care mental health services, by stepped
care model
This shows that approximately one third of the caseload is treated at step 4, the highest
complexity. This may then account for why clients do not ‘recover’ within the period of
treatment.
Figure 19: Number of referrals to IAPT services from Tower Hamlets GP practices, 2010/13
Practices appear to have widely different referral patterns to IAPT services – 15 practices
referred less than 200 patients, 7 referred over 500. In addition there are a lot of referrals
where the source is unknown.
The following table shows the number of referrals by age-band and gender:
694 612 557
473 598 559
747 765 580
1,914 1,975
1,696
-
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
2010/11 2011/12 2012/12(pro-rated)
Cases taken on for treatment by stepped care model
Step 4
Step 3
Step 2
Total cases taken on fortreatment
1,628
163
388
159
396
40 39
645
296 313 298
578 391
110 80 278 354
7
463 555
163 142 191 122 163 194 327
816
82 168 99
617 541 379 382
243 426
758
- 200 400 600 800
1,000 1,200 1,400 1,600 1,800
GP Referrals from April 2010 to January 2013
Referrals April 2010 to January…
38
Figure 20: Number of referrals to IAPT in Tower Hamlets by age-band and gender: 2010/11 to
2012/13
Source: Adult Psychology Service data, 2013
This shows that there are much higher numbers of women referred to the service
(approximately two female referrals to one male). This is in line with the profile of psychiatric
morbidity and the early experiences of IAPT services nationally21. However, in Tower
Hamlets there are more men than women in the age range 40 to 54, so that the gap
between women and men should be smaller than nationally.
The following figure shows an analysis of the referrals by age band and gender
(percentage).
21 ‘The most recent Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey (2007) shows that 61% of people in the community with a common mental disorder are female, which was very similar to the rate in IAPT services (66% female).’ David M Clark (2011) Implementing NICE guidelines for the psychological treatment of depression and anxiety disorders: The IAPT experience. Int Rev Psychiatry. 2011 August; 23(4): 318–327
359 538 610
158 222 256
1,175
1,304 1,265
510 600 665
640
652 676
338 408 385
372
373 349
248
254 254
183
174 164
116 89 85
74
92 95
33 37 22
2,803
3,133 3,158
1,403 1,610 1,667
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13(pro-rated)
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13(pro-rated)
Female Male
Referrals in Tower Hamlets by Age Band & Gender: 2010/11 to 2012/13
66 +
56 - 65
46 - 55
36 - 45
26 - 35
18 - 25
Total
39
Figure 21: Percentage of referrals to IAPT in Tower Hamlets by age-band and gender: 2010/11
to 2012/13
Source: Adult Psychology Service data, 2013
Interestingly, there also seems to be an increase in the numbers of younger women being
referred to the IAPT service. The number of referrals over 65 is discussed in Section 6 of this
chapter on older people.
The following figure shows the ethnic breakdown of IAPT referrals by percentage, number
and gender.
40
Figure 22: Referrals to IAPT service in Tower Hamlets by major ethnic group: 2010/11 to
2012/13
Source: Adult Psychology Service data, 2013
This shows that the proportions are broadly stable, with about one quarter of referrals where
ethnicity is not known. However, there appears to be under-utilisation of this service by the
Bangladeshi or Bangladeshi-British population, relative to the size of the population.
The following table shows analysis of IAPT referrals by ethnicity and gender.
30% 34% 33%
6% 6% 6%
15% 16% 15%
21% 20% 20%
29% 24% 26%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
% of annual referrals
Referrals in Tower Hamlets by Major Ethnic Group: 2010/11 to 2012/13
Non Stated/Unknown
All Other Ethnic Groups
Bangladeshi or BritishBangladeshi -ethn categ 2001 census
Oth White European/Europeanunsp/Mixed European 2001 census
White British - ethnic category2001 census
41
Figure 23: Referrals in Tower Hamlets by major ethnic group & gender (per cent): 2010/11 to
2012/13
Source: Adult Psychology Service data, 2013
This shows that the percentage of referrals from the population in the white British category
increased. Future analysis could potentially track completions and recovery rates also by
equality strand. Only 5% of all referrals are from Bangladeshi or British Bangladeshi women
who make up 11% of the adult population.
3.4 Summary of utilisation of primary care mental health services in Tower
Hamlets
Nearly all the data about utilisation of services collected relates to the IAPT service.
The only sources of information about GP management of common mental disorders
in primary care relates to case-finding / assessment of depression and to medication,
which show Tower Hamlets having lower rates for the former and higher rates for the
latter
The numbers of people referred to IAPT services as a percentage of those estimated
to have anxiety/depression is the third highest in London and the service performs
above the London average in the proportion of people ‘moving to recovery’
42
The rate of completion is below the London average and performance in terms of
clients who move off benefits is the third worst in London. This is believed to reflect
local economic circumstances
Tower Hamlets is the second-highest CCG in London in terms of the volume of anti-
depressant prescribing. Further work needs to be done to understand the
significance of this finding
The number of referrals to IAPT has increased since 2010/11 but the rate of increase
was projected to flatten in 2012/13 and the number taken on for treatment is project
to fall to one-third of the referrals received
There are much higher numbers of women referred to the service (approximately two
female referrals to one male), with an emerging trend towards an increase in the
number of young women (aged 18-24). This is in line with national experience;
except that Tower Hamlets has more men in the 40 to 54 age group, so a higher
proportion of men would be expected to be referred to the service, other things being
equal
There appears to be an increase in the percentage of referrals from the population in
the white British category and a relative under-utilisation of this service by the
Bangladeshi or Bangladeshi-British population, relative to the size of the population.
4 Adults of working age – community mental health services
This section describes the current services available in Tower Hamlets and compares them
with elsewhere in London using selected measures. It then analyses utilisation of secondary
mental health services, and looks at the activity of social care, voluntary organisations,
offenders’ services, and substance misuse services.
4.1 Description of services
NHS provided services
Community mental health services are the biggest and most diverse element of the
borough’s provision. The following services are provided by East London Foundation Trust
(ELFT) in Tower Hamlets:
Community mental health teams or CMHTs (four local teams: Bethnal Green & Globe
Town, Bow & North Poplar , Isle of Dogs, and Stepney & Wapping)
Crisis, Emergency, Liaison and Home Treatment teams
Assertive Outreach Team
Tower Hamlets Early Detection Service and Early Intervention Service
Community Recovery and Rehabilitation Teamprovides a community based
rehabilitation service for people with longstanding mental health difficulties
Housing Link Tower Hamletsadvice service for people with mental health difficulties
43
Perinatal Psychiatry Service: an outpatient service for women who have pre-existing
or new onset mental illness during pregnancy and up to a year postnatally
Occupational Therapy Service: assesses physical, psychological and social abilities
identifying strengths and needs, and developing a structured programme of activity in
collaboration with the service user
Clozapine Clinic Tower Hamlets: monitors medication for those using this
medication
Tower Hamlets Personality Disorder Service - offers a Mentalisation Based
Treatment service for people with histories of emotional, interpersonal and
behavioural difficulties.
Pritchard's Road Day Centre for adults on CPA with recurring mental health
problems living in the community,
Psychological Therapies Service – provides psychology, psychotherapy and
counselling
Community Learning Disability Service: its Mental Health care programme provides
specialist assessment, interventions and therapy for mental illness, behaviour and
emotional problems, emotional distress, vulnerability, abuse, promotion of good
mental health and psychological well-being and provision of education, consultation
and advice.( East London Foundation Trust provides psychiatric support, the service
is run by Barts Health )
The Specialist Addiction Unit (ELFT) provides assessment, care and treatment to
patients in Tower Hamlets whose drug and alcohol related needs require specialist
interventions from a multi-disciplinary team with expertise.
Local authority social workers are integrated into CMHTs and the council also commission
individualised care for people who are eligible.
The Council and Clinical Commissioning Group between them commission a full range of
community mental health services, mainly from voluntary organisations. This is shown in the
following table
Table 5: Community mental health services funded by LB Tower Hamlets and Tower Hamlets
CCG
Provider Service / Project Name Description
Bangladeshi Mental Health Forum
Bangladeshi Mental Health Forum
To organise an annual Bangladeshi Mental Health Day for Bangladeshi service users and carers
London Buddhist Centre
Mindful based Therapy (6 months) Mindfulness courses and activities
Alzheimer’s Society Dementia Café Peer support services for people with dementia and carers: 2 cafes, one Bengali speaking
44
Social Action for Health
Mellow Project
Support positive self-awareness and challenge stigma through support, information resources, training and social and educational activities for African and Caribbean people who have experienced mental health distress
Beside Membership Peer support, groups and information for people with long term mental health needs - range of 10 services
LB Tower Hamlets Parental Mental Health Service (CHAMPS)
2010 evaluation: two workers allocated to 4 CMHTs to enhance family work assessment and liaison/activities for children.
LB Tower Hamlets User involvement payment
Budget for paying service user and carer reps to attend meetings
Praxis Community Projects Range of support to Somali men and women with mental health problems
St Hilda’s Bondhon
Information, wellbeing and group activities for Bangladeshi women experiencing isolation or mental distress: two groups, one for younger women with postnatal depression.
Together Working Well for Wellbeing
Forensic Mental Health Mental health worker for information and support to offenders, including magistrates court assessment
Vietnamese M H Organisation
VHMS Vietnamese Service
Information ,wellbeing, outreach, befriending, 1:1 casework support, group support and interagency working for Vietnamese and Chinese communities, service users and carers
East London Asian Family Counselling
East London Asian Family Counselling
Bi-lingual (English & Bengali) counselling and support service for Asian women and their families
Hestia Housing & Support
Befriending Service 1:1 matched volunteer befriending for mental health and dementia patients in the hospital and in the community (NIS)
Family Action Building Bridges Preventative and wellbeing interventions for families with complex needs including parental mental illness
Family Action Carers Connect 1:1 and group advice and support for carers, including carers assessments
Lookahead Crisis House 10 crisis beds
Lookahead Rehab House 11 rehab beds for NHS also some supporting people contracts
Bowhaven Bowhaven Service user-run centre offering drop in, direct group activities and supporting user led groups.
Mind In Tower Hamlets & Newham (MITHN)
IMHA & Inclusive Advocacy
IMHA and inclusive advocacy for people with mental health problems in hospital and in the community
Mind In Tower Hamlets & Newham (MITHN)
Inclusive Mental Health Support
Casework and group activities for mental health wellbeing and social inclusion for people with serious mental illness
Mind In Tower Hamlets & Newham (MITHN)
Evening Service Provide structured support for 2 evenings per week and promote choice
45
In addition there is a small grants scheme (less than £4,000) for user-led services run by the
council which supported 33 initiatives in 2013/14.
4.2 Comparisons with community mental health services elsewhere
This section looks at Tower Hamlets services compared to London boroughs, and covers
CPA and use of secondary mental health services, specialist community teams and anti-
psychotic prescribing.
Care Programme Approach and use of secondary community services
The Care Programme Approach (CPA) has been used since 1990 as the framework that
supports and co-ordinates effective mental health for people with severe mental health
problems in secondary mental health services. It provides a means for co-ordinating
community mental health services and planning the range of care to meet an individual’s
needs. It involves carrying out a comprehensive, multi-disciplinary assessment and
producing a care plan for each patient. Tower Hamlets had a significantly higher than
England rate per 1,000 population for numbers of people on a CPA (11.11 versus 6.39 and
London = 7.43) or the second highest in London in 2010/11.
However, although numbers might be higher in Tower Hamlets, this might be viewed as a
positive given that it could be indicative of the fact that the co-ordination of care plans in the
community is happening systematically. This may reflect a higher level of SMI and people
with complex needs, or it may reflect an accumulation over time. An initiative started in
2012/3 for planned transfer of service users on CPA to primary care with support, where
Mind In Tower Hamlets & Newham (MITHN)
Khat Project Support to Khat users in the Somali community
Mind In Tower Hamlets & Newham (MITHN)
Welfare Benefit Advice Service
1:1 complex casework and court appeal for service users to obtain rights and entitlements
MITHN Counselling Service Counselling
Working Well Trust Employment Project
Employment support and training for people with serious mental illness in DTP and print operation and in sewing project (separate male and female)
Working Well Trust Rework Advice, guidance, support into employment and job retention
Community Options User Involvement Project Service user involvement: quarterly user forum and development /training support for user-led groups
Community Options Voluntary Sector Network
Coordinate voluntary sector provider network every 6 weeks
Community Options Support, Time & Recovery Service
Recovery support to service users with a mental health problem, predominantly anxiety and depression
46
appropriate to clinical needs. The following table sets out the number of people using
secondary mental health services in East London, and the numbers on CPA.
Table 6: Numbers on CPA
Level Tower Hamlets Newham City & Hackney
Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-12 Mar-13
On CPA 1408 1249 1387 1244 950 1000
Not on CPA 4330 3215 3720 2715 4503 3016
5738 4464 5107 3959 5453 4016
This shows that:
Both in March 2012 and March 2013, Tower Hamlets had more people on CPA, and
more in contact with secondary services but not on CPA (and therefore more in total
‘on the books’), than City and Hackney and Newham
The number on CPA in Tower Hamlets has reduced (as has the number not on CPA
in all three boroughs.)
It should be noted that Newham has a lower population than the other two boroughs, which
are approximately equal in population.
The following figure shows the number of people on Care Programme Approach (CPA) in
London boroughs, expressed as a crude rate per 100,000 population.
Figure 24: People on Care Programme Approach – rate per 100,000 population (London,
2010/11)
Source: Severe and Enduring Mental Illness Needs Assessment Service and Financial
Profiling (or SEMI) Tool
Tower Hamlets has the second highest rate (City and Hackney and Newham are also above
average), although since the period covered by this chart there has been a significant
reduction (from 2012 to 2013, as noted above).
47
Moving beyond those on CPA, the following figure shows the rate of adults using secondary
mental health care.
Figure 25: Standardised rate of adults using secondary mental health care per 100,000
population (London 2010/11).
:
Tower Hamlets has the second highest rate.
Specialist community teams
The National Service Framework (1999) introduced three specialist teams into community
mental health services. These are sometimes called ‘functional’ teams because they are
dedicated to a particular function, described in their names: crisis resolution and home
treatment (CRHT), assertive outreach (AOT) and early intervention in psychosis service (EI).
This sub-section shows how effective Tower Hamlets is in delivering these services
(expressed as a rate in contact per 100,000 population
Home treatment is an alternative to inpatient admission. The following table shows Tower
Hamlets compared to other London borough.
48
Table 26: Rate of people receiving home treatment by CRHT teams in London, 2011/12
Source: SEMI Tool
Tower Hamlets has an above average rate of people receiving home treatment. The
following table shows the rate in contact with Assertive Outreach services in London.
Table 27: Rate of people receiving assertive outreach services in London, 2011/12
Source: SEMI Tool
49
Again Tower Hamlets is above average. The following table shows the rate of people being
treated by Early Intervention teams.
Table 28: Rate of people receiving early intervention services in London, 2011/12
Source: SEMI Tool
Once more, Tower Hamlets has an above average rate. It therefore appears that local
‘functional ‘mental health teams are comparatively effective in the numbers of people they
reach.
Prescribing of anti-psychotic medication
The following table shows Tower Hamlets’ rate of prescribing of anti-psychotics in primary
care compared to London. The rate is expressed as defined daily dose (DDD) per weighted
population (STAR-PU). (Defined daily dose is a statistical measure of drug consumption
defined by the World Health Organisation which assumes the average dose per day for
adults. STAR-PU includes weighting for age and sex.)
50
Figure 29: Prescribing of all anti-psychotics in primary care, DDD per STAR-PU, 2011/12
Source: SEMI Tool
This shows that Tower Hamlets has the highest rate in London.
4.3 Referrals to community services: analysis of local data
At the request of the CCG, ELFT provided a dataset with a total of 60,554 community
referrals in the period 2008/2009-2012/2013 (seven months data). Of these 57,496
community referrals 87% (49,954) were adult mental illness referrals. A total of 25,381 were
internal community referrals22 and 24,573 were external community referrals23.
The number and source (internal or external) of referrals is shown for each year in the
following figure.
22
These include: Those not initiated by consultant, Consultant (not A&E) 23
These include: Accident: Emergency, GMP referral, Allied Health Professional, Self-referral, GP with special interest, Specialist Nurse
51
Figure 30: Community referrals by year (internal & external)
Source: East London Foundation Trust
This shows that:
The total number of referrals to community mental health services was falling from
2009/10.
Approximately half the work of the community teams is generated by internal
referrals within ELFT.
The largest proportion of internal community referrals were recorded under ‘not initiated by
consultant’, which is understood to refer to all other teams operated by the Trust. The
remaining half is referrals from other agencies, but the exact referral source is only broken
down by GP, A&E and other, as shown in the following figure.
5,930 6,658 6,946 5,671 5,943
6,834 7,093 6,464
5,563 4,920
12,764 13,751 13,410
11,234 10,863
-
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
16,000
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13(pro-rated)
Community Referrals by year
Internal
External
Total
52
Figure 31: Percentage of referrals by source of referral to ELFT Tower Hamlets community
mental services (all teams) 2008/13
This figure shows:
An increase in referrals from A & E from 11% to 20% (extrapolated) in the period.
Only 30% of all community services referrals come from GPs.
Contract monitoring reports include the number and proportion of community referrals who
were not known to the Trust at the point of referral (i.e. no prior referral existed within 24
months, including all teams). In 2012/13 this level was 31% (similar for all three boroughs
covered by the Trust).
Monitoring reports also show that over 97% of referrals to secondary community services
were assessed within 28 days.
The following figure shows the proportion of referrals for community services by major ethnic
group.
11% 11% 13% 14% 20% 2% 2%
3% 2% 0%
30% 33% 35% 32%
32%
52% 49% 45% 48%
46%
5% 4% 2% 3% 1%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-12 pro-rated
Referral Source to Community Services (Specialist Nurse, GPSI and AHP not included as figures insignificant)
Self Referral
Not initiated by consultant
GMP Referral
Consultant (not A:E)
Accident : Emergency
53
Figure 32: Proportion of external community referrals for adult mental illness by major ethnic groups
Source: East London Foundation Trust
This shows that the proportion of total referrals from each ethnic group has remained broadly
stable over the period, although over one third are ‘Not Stated or Unknown’. However, the
‘Asian or Asian British-Bangladeshi’ population and the ‘White British’ population groups in
Tower Hamlets are approximately equal size, yet the ‘Asian or Asian British-Bangladeshi’
population account for significantly fewer referrals to adult services.
LB Tower Hamlets monitors the number of assessments carried out under the Mental Health
Act, and includes a category for ethnicity (which however sometimes appears to record
nationality). The following table summarises the results for four separate years.
Table 7: Number and percentage of Mental Health Act assessments by white and main
Black Asian and Ethnic Minority ethnic groups
2007-
08 2009-
10 2010-
11 2011-
12 2007- 08 %
2009- 10 %
2010-11 %
2011-12 %
African 65 63 86 72 15.2 12.6 15.0 12.8
Afro-Caribbean 48 56 63 49 11.2 11.2 11.0 8.7
Bangladeshi 109 138 166 167 25.5 27.6 29.0 29.6
White British 137 177 171 201 32.1 35.4 29.9 35.6
All other 68 66 86 75 15.9 13.2 15.0 13.3
Total 427 500 572 564 100 100 100 100
Source: LB TH
29%
21%
1%
14%
35%
31%
18%
2%
14%
35%
30%
19%
2%
14%
35% 33%
17%
1%
13%
36%
31%
17%
1%
14%
37%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
White - British Asian or AsianBritish -
Bangladeshi
Black or BlackBritish -
Caribbean
All other EthnicGroups
Not Stated/Unknown
Proportion of External Community Referrals for Adult Mental Illness by Major Ethnic Groups
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
54
This shows that the number of assessments has increased since 2007/08 and that together
people of black African and Caribbean origins accounted for around a quarter of them,
although they only make up about 6% of the adult population.
The following figure shows the numbers assessed by each team in Tower Hamlets from
2009/12.
Figure 33: Mental Health Act assessments in Tower Hamlets
Source: East London Foundation Trust
When broken down by team, the largest number of Mental Health Act assessments was
made through the ‘Out of Hours’ service year on year. The outcome is largely detention
under section 2 or section 3 of the Act - last year making up a total of 73% of the
assessment outcomes24.
Community discharges
The following table shows the outcome of all the referrals to community services in the
period 2008/2009-2012/201325, using the categories recorded by ELFT at discharge.
24
Section 2 allows a patient to be admitted for assessment based on the recommendations of two doctors and application by the approved mental health professional. Section 3 allows a patient to be admitted to hospital for treatment based on the availability of appropriate medical treatment, the recommendations of two doctors and an application by the approved mental health professional. 25
The 2012-13 data is not a full year effect but for 7 months. Where necessary this has been pro-rated for more accurate comparisons to be made
46 67 47
149 185 193
82
72 75 50
53 48 60 57 64 40
59 63 23
22 20 49
57 54 499
572 564
-
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
MHAAs - by team for Tower Hamlets
Others
Assertive Outreach
Isle of Dogs
Bow/Poplar
Stepney/Wapping
Bethnal Green
O o H's
A & E EMHALS
TOTAL
55
Table 8: Summary of discharge destination (top discharges) 2008-2013
This shows that 21% of referrals either did not attend, did not respond to be seen or were an
inappropriate referral. On top of these 2.3% moved out of the area, and 7.5% were referred
to another speciality (although this could be after treatment). This shows that a high
proportion of the community team referrals appear to have been abortive or incomplete.
The number of service users who were discharged from community services more than once
gives an indication of the relapsing nature of mental illness, as shown in the following table.
Table 9: Number of discharges per unique patient in adult community services 2008/13
Number of discharges by patient
Number of patients
Per cent
1 2634 22.8
2 and 3 4250 36.8
4 and 5 2028 17.6
6 to 8 1346 11.7
9 to 11 582 5
12 to 14 285 2.5
15 or more 419 3.6
Just over one in five of those of working age who used the service used it only once in the
period. Two in five used the service four or more times (of those half used it six or more
times.)
The following figure shows the average number of days each user of the service was ‘on the
books’ before discharge.
Summary Count %
Achieved Outcome 5,534 9.8%
Admitted to hospital 4,179 7.4%
Assessment Completed 10,091 17.9%
Care Complete 2,084 3.7%
Did Not Attend 5,861 10.4%
Did Not Respond to be Seen 3,177 5.6%
Inappropriate Referral 2,854 5.1%
Moved Out of Area 1,301 2.3%
Other 5,315 9.4%
Referred to Other Specialty 4,262 7.5%
Treatment completed 5,197 9.2%
Unknown 1,391 2.5%
Other 5,257 9.3%
TOTAL 56,503 100.0%
56
Figure 34: Average length on caseload (adult mental illness and old age psychiatry)
This shows that the average ‘length of time on community caseload’ for adults rose from
2008/09 to 2011/12, but was projected to fall thereafter. In 2012/13, commissioners
commissioned services designed to transfer to primary care people who no longer needed to
use secondary services.
4 .4 Social care
This section reports available data on the use of social care services, covering parental
mental health, gender, ethnicity, age and geographic distribution of those recorded.
Parental mental health: the following table shows the number of child protection registrations
where parental mental illness is recorded.
166
195
241
287
247
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
Average Length on Community Caseload
Adult Mental Illness (WAA)
57
Table 10: Child Protection Plan (CPP) Registrations & Parental Mental Health issues2627
Category 2012/131 2011/12 2010/11 2009/10
Total CPP Registrations in the year 217 261 256 274
Total with Parental Mental Health
Problems recorded 11 18 23 26 1 Year to date data from 01/04/2011 -
19/12/2012
Source: Framework i
This table shows that parents with mental health problems account for less than 10% of CPP
registrations. This seems inherently unlikely. Further discussion with services would be
necessary to discover whether this was an accurate picture and to consider the extent and
needs of parental mental illness.
Figure 45 below demonstrates the gender breakdown of those whose primary service user
group is mental health. This relates to the commissioned social care that the local authority
purchases for individuals.
Figure 35: Number of people with mental health problems who are receiving social services support by gender
Source: FWi, June 2012
26
Based on CP registrations and service user sub groups (e.g. Children with mentally ill parent(s) where parenting capacity is limited, and possibly Families Affected by Mental Health difficulties) 27
Please note that the data is presented with a lot of gaps in the 'service user group' section on FrameWork I (FWi) which is where information on parents with mental health issues should be recorded. Thus the data provided is only based on what has been recorded on FWi and it is suspected that the actual figures could possibly be higher for each reporting year
481
365
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
Male Female
People with mental health problems who are receiving social services support by gender (source: FWi, June 2012)
Primary service usergroup: Mental Health
58
Figure 36: Number of people with mental health problems who are receiving social services support by ethnicity
Source: FWi, June 2012
The highest proportion of people receiving social services was white (42%) followed by
Asian (28%) and Black (18%). Of the Asian group 85% were Bangladeshi. (NB these ethnic
categories differ from those used by the NHS.)
Across the religion equality strand, both Christian (30%) and Muslim (28%) faith groups had
highest and a similar proportion of people receiving social services whose primary service
user group was mental health. Further sub-ethnic breakdowns shows that within the BME
group the highest number people receiving social services other than Bangladeshi were
Caribbean followed by African ethnic groups
The highest proportion of people receiving social services was in the 41-50 age group
(24%), followed by the 51-60 age group (20%) and 61-70 age group (17%).
Data on sexuality was poorly reported only 10 people responded. Only 2 people accessed
personal budgets and 1 person for mental health residential managed budgets. Data on
‘conditions’ was poorly recorded; only 15 people reported a condition.
The services that were most accessed were:
Mental health support28 – 37% (315 people)
Mental health residential – 11.8% (100 people)
Mental health home care – 7.3% (62 people)
However, the most striking finding from consideration of this information is that it only deals
with part of the activity of mental health services in the borough – that commissioned for
28
Prevention and support, this is a mixed bucket including refugees support, one off support etc.
28%
18%
1%
4%
42%
7%
% of people with mental health problems who are receiving social services support by ethnicity (source: FWi, June 2012)
Asian
Black
Mixed
Other
White
Blank
59
individuals - and misses out other local authority support through jointly commissioned block
contracts.
The following figure is a ‘heat-map’ showing the distribution of social care users within the
borough.
Figure 37: Framework-I cases flagged with mental health needs and currently using services29
This can be compared with the maps in chapter 3 showing deprivation and other indicators
of need within the borough. It can be seen that the highest numbers (‘hottest’ areas) in the
centre of the borough correspond broadly with the highest deprivation in the centre of the
borough (GP networks 1,2 and 5), whereas postcodes in the East of the borough in this map
do not reflect the ‘heat’ associated with high deprivation.
29
Snapshot was taken on January 2013 and 919 individuals were flagged as having mental health issues and currently using services
60
4.5 Voluntary sector utilisation
The recorded users of voluntary sector services increased from 6,500 to 9,800 in the three
year period from 2009 to 2012.
The following table lists the commissioned activities from voluntary sector and related
organisations, with the numbers using them (showing both contract and performance).
Table 11: Commissioned activity 2013/14
Activity Contract Performance
To organise an annual Bangladeshi Mental Health day mental health for Bangladeshi service users and carers 120
100 attendance at the event
Mindfulness courses and activities 45 places provided
45 places on the Mindfulness courses
Peer support services for people with dementia and carers: 2 cafes, one Bengali speaking
45 users and 33 carers
30 service users plus 20 carers
Support positive self-awareness and challenge stigma through support, information resources, training and social and educational activities for African and Caribbean people who have experienced mental health distress 20 20
Peer support, groups and information for people with long term mental health needs - range of 10 services
70 active members
100 active members
2010 evaluation: two workers allocated to 4 CMHTs to enhance family work assessment and liaison/activities for children.
900 children identified, 50-120 contracts per team per month
Budget for paying service user and carer reps to attend meetings
6 user reps and 1 carer rep
7 regular service user and carer reps attend meetings
Range of support to Somali men and women with mental health problems
42 casework plus 144 1:1 session to other Somali
users
40 casework plus 1:1 drop in sessions
Information, wellbeing and group activities for Bangladeshi women experiencing isolation or mental distress: two groups, one for younger women with postnatal depression.
30 users from each group
30 users for each group
Mental health worker for information and support to offenders, including magistrates court assessment 116
Information ,wellbeing, outreach, befriending, 1:1 casework support, group support and interagency working for Vietnamese and Chinese communities, service users and carers 25 families 25 families
61
A bilingual (English & Bengali) counselling and support service for Asian women and their families 431 service users 585 service users
1:1 matched volunteer befriending for mental health and dementia patients in the hospital and in the community (NIS)
106 service users, 35 volunteers
40 volunteers, 60 service users
Preventative and wellbeing interventions for families with complex needs including parental mental illness 34 families
16 family casework support packages
1:1 and group advice and support for carers, including carers assessments
117 cares casework
75 carer casework
Service user-run centre offering drop in, direct group activities and supporting user led groups.
80 unique users per week; 7
directly provided groups per week; 11 independent
groups supported per week
45 unique users per week; 5 directly provided groups and 3 independent groups supported per week
IMHA and inclusive advocacy for people with mental health problems in hospital and in the community
4083 1:1 advocacy sessions provided
4018 1:1 advocacy sessions
Casework and group activities for mental health wellbeing and social inclusion for people with serious mental illness
4811 1:1 sessions
provided and 2507 group
sessions provided
4900 1:1 sessions and 2516 group sessions per year
Provide structured support for 2 evenings pw and promote choice
1820 attendance and an average of 100 unique
users during the year
1100 attendance per year with a minimum of 46 unique users per year
Support to Khat users in the Somali community
1449 1:1 sessions and 702 group attendance
1400 1:1 sessions and 668 group attendance per year
1:1 complex casework and court appeal for service users to obtain rights and entitlements
2257 hours of 1:1 casework and court appeal
provided
1555 hours 1:1 casework and court appeals per year
Counselling
3593 1:1 counselling
sessions were provided
3600 sessions per year,
Employment support and training for people with serious mental illness in DTP and print operation and in sewing project (separate male and female)
1906 sessions provided working with an average of 43.25 users at
any one time during the year
34 service users supported in 1,796 sessions per year
62
Advice, guidance, support into employment and job retention
54 people supported into
employment; 54 supported to retain their
employment; 47 into
volunteering/work placements; 38
positive contacts with new
employers
58 people supported into employment; 40 supported to retain their employment; 45 into volunteering/work placements; 12 positive contacts with new employers
Service user involvement: quarterly user forum and development /training support for user-led groups
4 providers forum with a minimum
of 320 attendance per
year; 9 SUN meetings to
support 25 user-led groups in
2012-13
4 providers forum with a minimum of 240 attendance per year; a minimum of 8 SUN meetings to support all user-led groups
coordinate voluntary sector provider network every 6 weeks
9 VSN meetings and 30 voluntary sector providers in the network
minimum of 8 providers meetings and 30 providers in the VSN network
Recovery support to service users with a mental health problem, predominantly anxiety and depression
106 active casework per week; 284 new referrals; 4722 face to face contacts
84 service users supported per week; a minimum of 200 new referrals and a minimum of 4400 face to face contacts per year
This list does not duplicate work carried out elsewhere on accommodation and on day
opportunities. It does not include the user-led small grants. However, in general terms, it
shows that the great majority of provider meet their targets, and together undertake an
impressive array of initiatives, which appear responsive to need, the ethnic diversity of the
borough, and the needs of people with serious mental illness.
Analysis by the CCG of the users of voluntary sector services (taking the average of the
three years 2009/12) shows the broad ethnic group, as set out in the following table.
Table 12. Voluntary sector commissioned services uptake by ethnic group
Ethnic group Per cent
Asian/Asian British 26.9
Black 30.4
63
White British 25.4
White Other 7.1
Other 7
Prefer not to say 3.2
Total 100
This shows that the total users of third sector services include a greater proportion of the
black populations (counting black Caribbean and African and all black population categories)
than other services. In fact 15.6% of the total users of third sector services are in the
category ‘Black British Somali.’ The Asian/British Bangladeshi accounts for the great majority
of the Asian category (22.5% of the total number of third sector users.) This pattern will of
course reflect activity by organisations set up to meet the needs of specific communities.
The following map shows the location of the addresses of third sector organisations, mapped
against the density of service users (on Framework i) in each area.
Figure 38: Framework-i MH cases and providers – voluntary sector provision
This shows that there are pronounced differences in the location of voluntary sector
organisations. Most are clustered in the North West of the borough, in networks 1 and 2, but
64
there do not appear to be any in networks 3 and 4 (except on the boundary) and network 5 is
also under-represented.
4.6 Offenders and mental health
Forensic mental health services
The total number of forensic30 referrals in the time period covered by the ELFT dataset
(2008/13 as described above) was 592. Nevertheless there were only 42 forensic inpatient
admissions for Tower Hamlets in same period. It must therefore be assumed that the
majority of forensic referrals were for opinion, assessment or access to specific community
services managed by the Trust’s forensic services.
The following table shows the ethnicity of forensic community referrals.
Figure 39: Proportion of forensic community referrals by major ethnic groups
Source: East London Foundation Trust
This analysis shows a pattern of some variability, especially in the pro-rated year 2012/13.
30
Forensic psychiatry is a sub-specialty of psychiatry and is related to criminology: Howells K, Day A, and Thomas-Peter B (2004)
27%
17%
6%
34%
16%
23%
28%
8%
21% 21%
27% 31%
2%
21% 18%
26% 30%
6%
20% 18% 15%
48%
0%
31%
6%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
White - British Asian or AsianBritish -
Bangladeshi
Black or BlackBritish - Caribbean
All Other EthnicGroups
NonStated/Unknown
Proportion of Forensic Community Referrals by year by Major Ethnic Group
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13
65
Probation
It was noted in chapter 5 that there are nearly 1,100 offenders ‘on the books’ of the
Probation Service in Tower Hamlets, adhering to statutory conditions, of whom 656 are in
living in the community. Only 30 or 2.8% of the offenders managed by Probation had formal
orders with mental health conditions, although nearly a quarter had emotional well-being
issues linked to their offending.
The following table shows information on activity provided by Probation:
Table 13: Extracts from London Probation Workload summary for Tower Hamlets, 2012/13
Type of activity Number
Community order commencements 507
Custody commencements 267
Licence commencements 270
Suspended sentence order 282
Accredited programmes 57
Source: London Probation
There is clearly some way to go before the levels of need and activity for mental health and
Probation can match up. However, the activity from the court diversion service in the
borough provides a starting point (although not all those who appear in court will be
convicted of an offence).
Forensic Mental Health Practitioner Service, Thames Magistrate Court
The Forensic Mental Health Practitioner Service (FMHP) practitioner pro-actively screened
3,960 individuals in the year April 2011-March 2012, of which 326 undertook mental health
assessment.
These individuals mainly came through the court from custody either from prison (34% of
total offenders) or police custody (57% of total offenders) as this is the primary remit of the
service.
66
Figure 40: Legal status of offenders assessed at Thames Magistrates Court, 2011/12
The majority of the individuals assessed were Tower Hamlets residents at 223 (out of 326),
which is approximately 68% of total individuals. There appears to be a high employment
needs with 300 individuals (of who 204 were from Tower Hamlets) being identified as
registered as unemployed.
The number of male clients dominates (298 out of 326) and clients aged from 22 to 30 years
old represent a third of the total clients assessed (107), mostly White British (98) followed by
Any Other White Background (28) and Black British Caribbean (27).
In terms of formal mental health diagnosis, there were 102 clients suffering from
Schizophrenia (69 Tower Hamlets specific clients), 59 (40 Tower Hamlets specific clients)
suffering from co-morbid mental health problems and substance misuse. In addition,
approximately a third of clients 112 (~76 TH specific clients) were assessed as being at risk
of self-harm and 87 (59 Tower Hamlets specific clients) assessed to be at risk of harm to
others.
4.7 Substance misuse
There are seven main substance misuse providers who may see people with dual diagnosis
of mental health problems and substance misuse in the borough. With the exception of the
Dual Diagnosis services in CMHTs (which is commissioned by Tower Hamlets CCG), these
services are commissioned by LB Tower Hamlets for drug and alcohol treatment. The
following table sets out the estimated case load in August 2012.
.
7%
34%
57%
0% 0%
1% 1%
Bail
Remand Prison
Remand Police Custody
Bail Community Order
Bail Licence
Remand Licence
67
Table 14: Main drug and alcohol services and estimated caseload
Organisation Service Provider Estimated caseload
Specialist Addictions Unit (SAU)
Complex drug users
ELFT 260 (caseload 225 in contract monitoring report 2012/13)
Dual Diagnosis Service in CMHTs
Drug and alcohol with mental illness
ELFT 160 (106 unique individuals in contract monitoring report 2012/13)
Isis Female drug
Compass (national charitable provider)
70
General Practice Drug and alcohol
GP 1,000 estimate
TH Community Alcohol Team
Alcohol RAPT (Rehabilitation of Addicted Prisoners Trust, independent provider in several cities)
166
Community Drug Team (CDT)
Drug Lifeline (national charitable provider)
620
A & E nurses at Royal Hospital London
Emergency hospital drug and alcohol
Barts Health Not available
Source: figures supplied by Gill Burns, TH CCG; ELFT contract monitoring
There is no reporting from the substance misuse services about the number of clients with a
dual diagnosis of substance misuse and mental health problems. Similarly, the ELFT dual
diagnosis and SAU services do not report NDTMS data (the national scheme for substance
misuse reporting). This produces a gap in reporting data.
However, ELFT secondary mental health services do report the number of mental health
service users with secondary diagnosis of substance misuse recorded, or with a record of
substance misuse problems. In the first quarter of 2013/14, 21% of community patients had
dual diagnosis of mental illness and substance misuse.
4.8 Summary of utilisation of secondary community services
Tower Hamlets had a significantly higher than England rate per 1,000 population for
numbers of people on CPA and the second highest in London in 2010/11, and also
had high rates for those in contact with secondary mental health services.
Tower Hamlets has the highest rate of prescribing anti-psychotics in primary care in
London (by volume of prescriptions)
Specialist or ‘functional’ community teams are in touch with a higher proportion of
community services in Tower Hamlets compared with the London average, and
therefore appear to be reasonably effective
68
The total numbers of referrals and discharges per year to secondary community
services are falling
The ‘Asian or Asian British-Bangladeshi’ population account for significantly fewer
referrals than the ‘White British’ population although the populations are
approximately the same size
People of black African and Caribbean origins accounted for around a quarter of
Mental Health Act assessments, although they only make up about 6% of the adult
population.
The team which carries out the largest number of Mental Health Act amendments is
the out of hours team.
Approximately half the referrals to the community teams are generated by internal
referrals within ELFT. Only 30% of all community services referrals (taking both
internal and external) come from GPs.
31% of community referrals are not known to Trust services (in the previous two
years) at the point of referral
Analysis of the source of referrals shows an increase in referrals from A & E.
The highest proportion of people receiving social services was White (42%) followed
by Asian (28%) and Black (18%). Of the Asian group 85% were Bangladeshi. This
suggests (relative to population) over-utilisation by white populations and under-
utilisation by the Bangladeshi community
The highest proportion of people receiving social services was in the 41-50 age
group (24%), followed by the 51-60 age group (20%) and 61-70 age group (17%).
There were more males than females. These figures suggest an under-utilisation by
younger people and women.
A high proportion of the referrals to community services were abortive or incomplete:
21% of referrals either did not attend, did not respond to be seen, or were an
inappropriate referral
Two in five of those who used a community service used a service four or more
times in a five year period
The average ‘community length of stay’ for adults rose from 2008/09 to 2011/12 and
is projected to fall thereafter
21% of community mental health patients had a record of dual diagnosis of mental
illness and substance misuse, although records are not kept of substance misuse
service users with mental health problems.
Collection of information on the mental health of offenders is too fragmented to draw
conclusions in this needs assessment.
69
5 Adults of working age: inpatient services
This section covers service provision, comparisons with other areas, emergency response
and general hospital admissions, service utilisation and a summary.
5.1 Description of service provision
Inpatient care in Tower Hamlets is provided by ELFT in four wards on the Mile End Hospital
site: Brick Lane Ward, Globe Ward, Lea Ward and Roman Ward. Wards are not male/female
only because the capacity can be flexed according to demand, whilst maintaining required
gender separation.
Psychiatric intensive care is provided by ELFT in two wards at Mile End serving the whole
Trust:
Rosebank Ward- female only: a Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit service for female
service users in East London and a Low Secure Service for Forensic Services and
Hackney
Millharbour Ward: a Psychiatric Intensive Care/Low Secure Service providing 14
beds for men. Serving as the Psychiatric Intensive Care (PICU) Service for Tower
Hamlets and a Trust wide Low Secure Service.
5.2 Number and rate of admissions and comparisons with other areas
There appear to be marked variations in hospital admission rates and the use of community
mental health services. Outer North East London has a greater balance towards activity in
community services rather than hospital admission. There is some evidence31 that more
community focused models of care are more effective, potentially more efficient and that
patients would like the choice of home treatment.
The complexity of factors that determine inpatient admission for mental illness present major
challenges in like-for-like comparison of different areas. The number of people using mental
health services has been rising ever since comprehensive national information started to be
collected through the Mental Health Minimum Dataset. Despite the possibility that improving
data quality contributed to this increase in 2004/05 and 2005/06, in each year since 2005/06
the rise in the number of people using services has been nevertheless accompanied by a
reduction in the proportion of these people who spent time in hospital. However, the latest
figures show, for the first time, an increase in the proportion of people using these services
who spent time in hospital during the year32, as in the following table, showing the rate of
admission to hospital per 100,000 population.
31
http://www.nao.org.uk/publications/0708/helping_people_through_mental.aspx 32
Mental Health Bulletin, 2011
70
Figure 34: Rate of admission to hospital inpatient care per 100,000 population
Source: NHS London, MH toolkit
Between 2009/10 to 2011/12 Tower Hamlets had the seventh highest standardised
admission rate in London. Newham and City and Hackney have higher rates and more
admissions in total than Tower Hamlets.
The following indicator shows the percentage of people admitted (i.e. spent at least one
night as an inpatient during the year) out of all of those who had contact with specialist
mental health services funded by the NHS. Individuals are counted once only in the year,
regardless of how many times they came into contact with services. These rates have been
directly standardised to account for the differences due to age and sex.
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
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71
Figure 41: Admission of service users (% of people in contact with mental health
services who are admitted)
Source: NHS Information Centre mimimum data set (MH tool indocator SS9)
We know that many people with SMI have no contact with specialist mental health services.
Just over 9% of people known to mental health services were admitted to hospital for one or
more nights during the course of 2010/11, significantly lower than the London average.
72
Reasons for admission
The following figures show Tower Hamlet’s rates of admissions for depression and
(separately) serious mental illness, compared to London.
Figure 42: Rate of admission to hosital for uniploar depressive episodes per 100,000
population 2009/12
Source: NHS London, MH toolkit
During 2009/10 to 2011/12, Tower Hamlets was fourth highest in London for admissions for
unipolar depressive disorders (rate per 100,000 weighted population, NEPHO). 59.5 vs
London = 37.0). Tower Hamlets also performs significantly worse than England on the same
measure (59.5 vs 32.1.)33]
Directly standardised rate for emergency hospital admissions for Schizophrenia, schizotypal
and delusional disorders34 were180 vs 57 (London = 103)35 or the third highest in London.
The following figure shows the reates of admission for London boroughs.
33
Hospital Episode Statistics, The NHS Information Centre for health and social care, and the Office for National Statistics (2009/10 to 2011/12) 34
This indicator measures the emergency admission rates to hospital as a result of schizophrenia and delusions. The data is sourced from the Hospital Episode Statistics dataset. Schizophrenia is one of the most common serious mental health conditions. The illness has a range of symptoms including hallucinations, delusions, and difficulty in thinking NHS Choices, Nov 2012 http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Schizophrenia/Pages/Introduction.aspx
35Hospital Episode Statistics, The NHS Information Centre for health and social care, and the Office for National
Statistics (2009/10-2011/12)
0102030405060708090
New
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73
Figure 43: Rate of admission to hospital for a psychotic illness per 100,000 population
Source: NHS London (MH tool)
Between 2009/10 and 2011/12, Tower Hamlets had the third highest rate of emergency
admissions to hopsital for people with a psychotic illness in London (rate per 100,000
weighted population, NEPHO)
Mental Health Act detentions use standard criteria to define admission threshold and
therefore give a good basis for comparisons. East London NHS Foundation Trust, covering
City & Hackney, Newham and Tower Hamlets, had the highest rate of Mental Health Act
admissions nationally according to a benchmarking club report in 200936.
The following figure shows the number of patients admitted to hospital under the provisions
of the Mental Health Act in 2010/11.
36
Audit Commission Mental Health Benchmarking Club report October 2009
0
50
100
150
200
250H
ackn
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74
Figure 44: Admissions to hospital under the Mental Health Act per 100,000 population
Source: NHS London, MH tool indicator
There was an above average rate of admissions to hospital under the Mental Health Act,
although the relative positions of City & Hackney and Newham, whilst also above average,
no longer suggest the highest rate (as in the previous figure).
75
The following indicator shows the average number of daily occupied bed days, a measure of
the inpatient capacity used.
Figure 45: Average number of daily occupied inpatient bed days 2010/
2011
Source: NHS London, MH tool indicator
This shows that the number of occupied bed days in Tower Hamlets was significantly less
than average.
5.3 Emergency response services – A & E and London Ambulance Service
This section reports mental health use of emergency services, that is, attendance at the
Accident and Emergency Department (A&E) at the Royal London Hospital and emergency
calls to the London Ambulance Service.
There were a total of 2004 A&E attendances coded to Tower Hamlets residents between
2009/9 and 2011/12. The following figure shows the age-standardised rate for London and
similar boroughs, covering a single year 2010/11.
76
Figure 46: Standardised hospital admission rate for self-harm, highlighting the most socially deprived boroughs (in yellow and blue), 2010/11
37
Source: Association of Public Health Observatories health profiles (MH tool indicator QX3)
Tower Hamlets has a lower rate than the other deprived boroughs and indeed lower than all
boroughs except four.
Local data shows that there has been a 43.7% decrease in A&E attendances from 2008/09
to 20011/12, as shown in the following figure.
37
The self-harm and suicide figures relate to people of all ages and have been standardised to take account of age and gender differences between populations. Both indicators are subject to variation in the way that information is recorded and should be used with caution.
77
Figure 47: Number of A&E attendances for self-harm (TH residents)
Source: Hospital Episode Statistics
It is believed that coding in A&E for mental health may not always be robustly collected and therefore coding or changes in coding and systems may explain this decrease in admissions for self-harm. Other possible explanations are lower than national rates of admission for self-harm, or that there are lower numbers of people attending A&E at crisis point. Although the actual numbers attending A& E have fallen the age distribution and gender
breakdowns remain largely the same for the past few years as shown in the following
figures, 42 and 43):
Figure 48: Age distribution of annual self-harm related A&E admissions
Source: Hospital Episode Statistics
17% 18% 19% 15%
38% 38% 35% 38%
20% 20% 19% 18%
13% 17% 17% 19%
12% 7% 11% 11%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
% of annual self harm
related admissions
Age distribution of annual self harm related A&E admissions in Tower Hamlets
50 and over
40 ‒ 49
30 ‒ 39
20 ‒ 29
10 ‒ 19
78
Figure 49: A&E attendance by gender (percentage)
Source: Hospital Episode Statistics
There is a minimal number of people coded as gender code 0 – which is why the proportions
do not evenly add up to 100%.
Approximately nine per cent of calls to the London Ambulance Service (LAS) are to assist
patients with mental health problems38. The following table shows the average number of
incidents per month in 2012 in Tower Hamlets by the code assigned to them by the
ambulance service.
Table 15: emergency call-outs related to mental health (including) and substance misuse,
average per month 2012.
Incident Average per month
Psychiatric 43
Self-harm 50
Drug overdose 53
Hyperventilation/panic attack 73
Alcohol 151
The table shows the volume of incidents dealt with by the London Ambulance Service in the
borough: a total of 370 incidents per months, although some may be recorded under more
than one category, and some incidents may not always relate to mental health (e.g. where
drug overdoses are unintentional). The great majority of incidents result in transfer to a
healthcare provider and (except in hyperventilation/ panic attack) the majority are conveyed
by the ambulance service.
38
Quality Account 2010/11, London Ambulance Service, 2011
49.6% 42.9% 46.7% 48.4%
50.4% 57.1% 53.1% 51.0%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
A&E attendence by gender %
Female
Male
79
5.4 Inpatient mental health services for adults: local data
The number of admissions (adults of working age) in Tower Hamlets is shown in the
following table.
Table 16: Mental health inpatient admissions of Tower Hamlets residents to Tower Hamlets
services, 2008/2013
Year Number of adult admissions
2008/09 517
2009/10 599
2010/11 592
2011/12 628
2012/13 787
Source: ELFT dataset analysed by TH CCG; 2012/13 contract monitoring
This shows that the number of adult admissions has risen over the period. However, it
should be noted that City and Hackney had 1148 and Newham 1143 admissions in 2012/13.
An exercise has been undertaken to illustrate the occupancy level of adult inpatient beds in
Tower Hamlets. (Feasibility study into potential reconfiguration of adult inpatient care (NEL
CSU, 5 August 2013). This showed that the number of admissions was increasing (as is the
population), but that over the last three years the number of available days has exceeded
the number of occupied days.
The dataset supplied by ELFT covered 3,561 admissions, of which 2,772 were in Tower
Hamlets for adults of working age, relating to 1,595 ‘unique’ individual patients. The data
showed whether or not a patient was known to ELFT on admission or was ‘new’. (An
admission is deemed to be 'new' if in the past 24 months the patient has had no contact with
the Trust via an inpatient ward stay or community referral. Contact with the Crisis and Home
Treatment teams is excluded from this calculation.)
80
Figure 50: proportion of mental health inpatient admissions in Tower Hamlets known to services on admission
This shows that the proportion who were new to services (no contact with community
services in the last two years) when admitted is about 15% and appears to be increasing.
Some patients were admitted more than once over the four-and-a-half year period. The
breakdown is shown in the following table:
Table 17: Number of adult inpatient admissions by unique patient
This shows that just under two thirds of patients were admitted only once in the four-and-a-
half year period under review, showing that one third of the inpatient population were repeat
users.
9% 14% 15% 18%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2008-09 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 pro-rated
Patient known to ELFT on admission by year
Yes (%)
No (%)
No. of admissions by patient No. of Patients % of Patients
1 1,030 64.6%
2-3 422 26.5%
4-5 103 6.5%
6-8 27 1.7%
9-11 8 0.5%
12-14 3 0.2%
15+ 2 0.1%
Total Patients 1,595 100.0%
81
Monitoring reports by ELFT show that the proportion of inpatient mental health Service
Users with secondary diagnosis of substance misuse recorded or record of substance
misuse problems was 34%.39
The following figure shows the rate of admissions from the eight GP networks. In theory, this
measure should reflect population need, i.e. the area with the greatest need should have
most admissions, if the ‘filters’ to service are working effectively.
Figure 51: Rate of admissions by GP network (admissions per ‘000 registered patients 2008/13.
This shows network 2 has the highest rate (due to the Health E1 practice, which was
founded to serve homeless people and those in unsettled accommodation) and network 8
the lowest. However, there is still a variation of 1 per ‘000 in the rates of the other six
networks (i.e. within the range 1.5 and 2.5 per ‘000). Further work to understand the reasons
for this variation many be instructive.
Detailed analysis of inpatient activity data has been undertaken by age and ethnicity in order
to ascertain how the profile of inpatient service users reflects the population of the borough.
The following figure shows the Inpatient admissions by age.
39
ELFT Contract Monitoring report, May2013
0.00
0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
3.50
4.00
4.50
5.00
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 pro-rated
Admission per Network per'000 patients
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
82
Figure 52: Inpatient admissions to Tower Hamlets adult mental health services by age band
2008/13.
This shows that the number of younger people in the age band 25- 34 years has increased,
whilst the numbers aged 18-24 show variability. Of note, there is still a small number of
admissions of people under 18, although these should only be urgent admissions for a short
time until a bed in a CAMHS unit can be found.
The number and percentage of discharges from inpatient services is analysed by the main
ethnic groups in the following figure. (Counting discharges does not differ significantly in this
instance from counting admissions.)
16 12 21 13 22
81 97 81 72
98
160 186 193 229
195
159
191 170 167 168
114
127 134
127 120 64
65 60 56
41 115
101 100 107
93 709
779 759
771
737
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 pro-rated
Inpatient Admissions by Age
65 and Over
55 to 64
45 to 54
35 to 44
25 to 34
18 to 24
Under 18
Grand Total
83
Figure 53: Adult inpatient discharges by main ethnic group, Tower Hamlets 2008/13
This shows that the number and percentage of discharges from the ‘White’ population group
has fallen and the number and percentage from the ‘Other Ethnic Group’ category has
increased (albeit from a small base). The number of admissions from the ‘Asian or Asian
British’ category has remained stable (although still below the one-third of the population in
this group) whilst the admissions from ‘Black or Black British’ show variability, although they
account for approximately twice the proportion of the black populations in the borough
(which was 6.6% of the adult according to the 2011 census).
Inpatient admissions by age and ethnicity
The following figures show the ethnic origin of the younger inpatient admissions, i.e. 18 to 24
and 25 to 34 years.
84
Figure 54: inpatient admissions aged 18 to 24 by ethnicity, 2008/13
Figure 55: inpatient admissions aged 25 to 34 by ethnicity, 2008/13
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 pro-rated
Inpatient Admissions by Ethnicity - 18-24 Years
Asian or Asian British
Black or Black British
Mixed
Not Known or Not Stated
Other Ethnic Group
White
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 pro-rated
Inpatient Admissions by Ethnicity - 25-34 Years
Asian or Asian British
Black or Black British
Mixed
Not Known or Not Stated
Other Ethnic Group
White
85
As expected, given the previous figures on ethnicity and age, the Bangladeshi and black
African and Caribbean groups account for the largest proportion of the younger age group
who are admitted as inpatients.
The monthly contract monitoring report for June 2013 gave a breakdown of Mental Health
Act detentions by ethnicity for the period.
Figure 56: Percentage by ethnicity of patients detained under Mental Health Act, East London,
2013
Note: Shows population percentage for Tower Hamlets based on estimated population not
2011 census
Source: ELFT KPI 34, June 2013
This shows that black African and Caribbean service users accounted for 26% of the
detentions, compared to less than 7% of the adult population.
The average length of stay in adult inpatient services is shown in the following figure.
22.7
47.1
22.2
44.1
23.4
44.2 0.0
2.6
1.4
3.0
1.3
1.7
7.2
11.1
6.9
12.3
7.8
7.9
0.0
1.2
1.4
1.1
0.0
0.6
2.1
4.0
6.9
3.8
1.3
2.2
0.0
1.4
4.2
1.1
0.0
0.9
2.1
2.8
8.3
2.9
27.3
30.5
3.1
1.0
4.2
0.8
0.0
1.0
19.6
9.2
13.9
10.3
6.5
2.2
21.7
10.7
22.2
12.4
19.5
2.8
1.0
2.2 2.8
2.4
1.3
0.5
1.0
1.4 0.0
0.7
1.3
2.4
3.1
1.9 4.2
2.0 3.9
1.2
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
City &Hackney
Caseload %
City &Hackney
Population %
NewhamCaseload %
NewhamPopulation %
TowerHamlets
Caseload %
TowerHamlets
Population %
A breakdown by ethnicity of service users detained under the MHA, compared to the ethic profile of the borough
Not Stated
Any Other Ethnic Background
Chinese
Any Other Black Background
Black or Black British African
Black or Black British Caribbean
Any Other Asian
Bangladeshi
Pakistani
Indian
Other Mixed Background
White & Asian
White & Black African
White & Black Caribbean
Any Other White
White Irish
White British
86
Figure 57: Average length of stay 2008/2009-2012/2013 40
Source: ELFT data set analysed by CCG
The average length of stay for adult mental Illness (Working Age Adults or WAA) shows a
continuing drop since 2008/09, a fall of over 30% from 2009/09 to 2012/13 (part year).
The following figure shows the percentage of discharges by length of stay, grouped into
bands, with the number in each band.
40
Average based on the 7 months data available
52 52 45 41 36
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
200
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
Patients Average Length of Stay
Adult Mental Illness (WAA)
87
Figure 58: Adult acute discharges in Tower Hamlets by length of stay band 2008/13
Source: ELFT data set analysed by CCG
This shows that although the total number of discharges have increased, there have been
greater increase in the short lengths of stay (up to thirty days), whilst the lengths of stay over
30 days have fallen. The proportion of admissions under three days has increased to over
10%. Further investigation could reveal whether these admissions could have been
avoided.
Summary of utilisation of adult inpatient services
Comparison with London
Between 2009/10 to 2011/12 Tower Hamlets had the seventh highest standardised
admission rate in London and the directly standardised rate for emergency hospital
admissions for mental health in Tower Hamlets was significantly higher than the
England and London averages
88
Just over 9% of people known to mental health services were admitted to hospital for
one or more nights during the course of 2010/11, significantly lower than the London
average
Directly standardised emergency hospital admissions for both unipolar depressive
disorders and schizophrenia were significantly higher than England and London
(Tower Hamlets was the fourth and third highest in London respectively)
The rate of admissions under the Mental Health Act was above the London average
in 2010/11
The number of occupied bed days in Tower Hamlets was significantly less than the
London average.
Emergency response: A&E and ambulance
Tower Hamlets has a lower standardised hospital admission rate for self-harm than
the London and England averages. This is illustrated by the 43.7% decrease in A&E
attendances from 2008/09 to 20011/12, as shown by local data
Approximately nine per cent of calls to the London Ambulance Service (LAS) are to
assist patients with mental health problems41. This equates to approximately 370
calls per month.
Local utilisation data
The number of inpatient admissions has increased for adults of working age
The proportion who were not known to services when admitted is about 15% and
appears to be increasing
There is a variation of 1 per ‘000 in the admission rates of the six GP networks
(within the range of 1.5 and 2.5 per ‘000 registered population)
Just under two thirds of patients were admitted only once in the four-and-a-half year
period under review, showing that one third of the inpatient population were repeat
users
34% of mental health inpatients had a record of dual diagnosis of mental illness and substance misuse (2013)
The number of younger people in the age band 25- 34 years has increased
The number of admissions from the ‘White’ population group have fallen
The number of admissions from the ‘Asian or Asian British’ category has remained
stable (although still below the one-third of the population in this group) whilst the
admissions from Black or Black British show variability, although they account for
approximately twice the proportion of the Black populations in the borough (which
was c7% according to the LBTH Factsheet, predating 2011 census)
Analysis of admissions shows that Asian/Bangladeshi, Black and Other inpatients
are younger than White, and that Asian and Asian/British young people account for
more admissions (aged 18-35) than other population groups, with admissions from
black population groups now also higher than white in the 18 to 24 age group
41
Quality Account 2010/11, London Ambulance Service, 2011
89
There appears to be over-representation for Black Caribbean and Black African
service users among patients detained under the Mental Health Act when compared
to Census 2011 figures for proportion of population (6.6% of adult population)
The average length of stay for adult mental illness shows a continuing fall since
2008/09
Within this trend, there has been a greater increase in the short lengths of stay (up to
thirty days), than in lengths of stay over 30 days, which have also fallen.
6 Older adults
This section describes current provision and then analyses primary mental health care,
community mental health, and inpatient services for older people (both mental health and
general hospital). It concludes with a summary of key points.
6.1 Description of service provision
Primary mental health care for older adults is provided by GPs and IAPT services, as
described for adult primary care.
Community mental health services for older people are provided by:
The Community Mental Health Team (Older People) which operates a single point of
entry for all referrals to Mental Health Services for Older People.
The Community Dementia Care Team (CDT), an integrated mental health and social
services team which provides psychiatric and social needs assessment, intervention
and treatment The CDT operates a single point of entry for all referrals to Mental
Health Services for Older People.
The Diagnostic Memory Clinic (DMC) , a joint clinic run by East London Foundation
Trust provided by a multi-disciplinary team in geriatric medicine, neuropsychology
and psychiatry, and including a care coordinator.
Psychological Therapies service which provides psychological assessment and
treatment for older people with dementia and functional mental health problems.
Many of the third sector services listed for adults in fact provide an ‘ageless’ service, i.e. for
adults and older adults according to need. Examples of service for people with dementia
are:
The Dementia Cafés, including an English speaking café and a Bengali speaking
café are provided by the Alzheimer’s Society, to provide informal peer support for
people with dementia and their carers
90
A Dementia Adviser Service is provided by the Alzheimer’s Society and co-located
with the Memory Clinic and Community Dementia Team, to provide support for
people with low to moderate needs.
Awareness Raising Strategy, to improve knowledge on dementia and access to local
services. One example includes having trained 120 imams and religious teachers in
dementia awareness.
Inpatient services
Inpatient care for older adults is offered at two wards on the Mile End site:
Leadenhall Ward provides inpatient assessment for service users with functional
mental illnesses (i.e. non organic, so psychosis or depression, for example, and not
dementia).
Columbia ward is a Trust-wide service which offers assessment to people who have
advanced dementia and who require a period of hospital care to stabilise their
condition
The Green in Bethnal Green provides inpatient continuing care for older people with
dementia.
A Dementia Liaison Service at the Royal London Hospital to provide specialist assessment
for in-patients with dementia on general wards, to improve their experience and reduce
length of stay and thereby generate savings to the health economy.
The London Borough of Tower Hamlets, working with NHS Tower Hamlets PCT/Clinical
Commissioning Group, has transformed pathways for people with dementia and their carers
over the past year. They have commissioned, with recent investment of approximately £1m
across PCT/CCG and local authority:
A multi-disciplinary Memory Clinic to provide early assessment for people with
memory problems. The clinic provides a one stop shop for all medical, psychological
and social care needs for people with dementia and their carers. Referrals to the
multi-disciplinary Memory Clinic to provide early assessment for people with memory
problems increased from 190 in 2010/11 to 335 in 2011/12.
A multi-disciplinary health and social care Community Dementia Team to support
people with dementia with moderate to high levels of need
An innovative new extra care supported accommodation scheme specifically for
service users with dementia, with 13 units, due to open
Redesigned inpatient dementia assessment wards across east London, closing three
wards and opening one new ward, generating savings of £1.1m.
91
6.2 Primary mental health care service utilisation by older people
The following table shows the percentage of referrals by age band received by adult
psychology service, compared to the proportion of the population.
Figure 59: Proportion of referrals to IAPT in Tower Hamlets by age band: 2010/10 to 2012/13
Source: Adult Psychology service data, 2013 * 2011 Census data
The proportion of 2%-3% (from 2010/13) referred over the age of 65 compares with the 7%
of the total population aged 66 and over.
6.3 Community mental health services for older people
Number of community referrals
The following figure shows the number of referrals to community services by the GP
practices which make the most referrals.
12% 16% 18% 22%
40% 40% 40% 36%
23% 22% 22% 18%
15% 13% 13% 10%
7% 6% 5% 6%
3% 3% 2% 7%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Tower HamletsDemographic*
Proportion of referrals in Tower Hamlets by Age Band: 2010/11 to 2012/13
66 +
56 - 65
46 - 55
36 - 45
26 - 35
18 - 25
92
Figure 60: Proportion of external community referrals for old age psychiatry by major GP
practice
This shows that the top ten practices account for over half the referrals. Further work would
be needed to see whether this was due to list size, age structure of practice, or other factors.
The following figure shows the analysis of referrals by ethnic origin.
93
Figure 61: Proportion of external community referrals for old age psychiatry by major ethnic
groups
Source: East London Foundation Trust
Over half the external community referrals are coded as White, although the proportion
coded ‘Asian Bangladeshi’ community for ‘Old Age Psychiatry’ has increased to nearly 20%
in the period. This compares with 63% of the over 65 population who are white, and 23%
who are Bangladeshi.
The following table shows the caseload of older people’s community services.
Table 18: Tower Hamlets older people’s community mental health service caseload by service,
2013
Service Caseload 31/3/13
Dementia Adviser Team 216
Outpatients 241
Dementia Care Team 268
This shows that 725 people were ‘on the books’ at this point in 2013. The following figure
shows the increase in referrals to the memory clinic over time.
46%
10%
1%
12%
31%
42%
14%
1%
9%
34%
58%
15%
3%
9%
15%
56%
19%
2%
10% 13%
56%
18%
4% 9%
13%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
White - British Asian or AsianBritish -
Bangladeshi
Black or BlackBritish -
Caribbean
All Other EthnicGroups
Not Stated/Unknown
Proportion of External Community Referrals for Old Age Psychiatry by Major Ethnic Groups
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
94
Figure 62: Number of referrals to memory clinic in Tower Hamlets, 2007/13
This increase reflects the introduction of a new service model and new investment in
dementia.
The following table shows the number of patients who had multiple discharges from
community mental health services.
Table: 19 Number of discharges per unique patient in older adults community services 2008/13
Number of discharges by patient
Number of patients
Per cent
1 716 28.3
2 and 3 1159 45.8
4 and 5 389 15.4
6 to 8 213 8.4
9 to 11 46 1.8
12 to 14 7 0.3
15 or more 2 0.1
Source: ELFT dataset
More than three in five of those using Old Age Psychiatry community services are
discharged between two to five times in the period.
The length of time on the community caseload has also been reviewed, as in the following
table.
Table 20: Average length on community caseload (old age psychiatry) 2008-2013
84 117
89
190
335
300
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
2007/8 2008/9 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
Referrals to Memory Clinic
Measure Financial Year
95
The average length of time on the community caseload has increased since 2008/09 from
157 days to about 270 days.
6.4 Inpatient services for older people
The following figure shows the number of admissions for adult and older adult inpatient care.
Figure 63: Inpatient admissions by year for adult mental illness and old age psychiatry
This shows that the number of inpatient admission has remained steady for older adults (but
increased for adults of working age).
The 482 admissions in the dataset provided by ELFT relate to 332 individual patients being
admitted, some multiple times. The breakdown is as follows:
517 599 592 628
735
115
100 100 107
103
1
632
699 692 735
838
-
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13(pro-rated)
Inpatient Admissions by Year
Old Age Psychiatry
Adult Mental Illness
Grand Total
Year 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 All Years
Average Length of Stay (Days) 157 257 383 250 273 268
96
Table 21: Number of admissions by patients, older adult mental health services, 2009/13
This shows that one in five patients was admitted more than once.
The following figure shows the proportion of inpatient admissions for older people by age.
Figure 64: Proportion of inpatient admissions for old age psychiatry by 5 year age bands
The small number of admissions in each age-band makes it difficult to draw conclusions
about trends. The age band which accounts for the highest number of admissions is 70-74.
The following table sets out the ethnicity of inpatients compared to the population of Tower
Hamlets (aged 65 and over)
No. of admissions by patient No. of Patients % of Patients
1 257 77.4%
2-3 65 19.6%
4-5 6 1.8%
6-8 2 0.6%
9-11 1 0.3%
12-14 1 0.3%
15+ - 0.0%
Total Patients 332 100.0%
Under 65 65-69 70-74 75-79 80-84 85-89 90 and Over
2008/09 0.0% 11.6% 26.8% 20.5% 25.9% 11.6% 3.6%
2009/10 6.0% 12.0% 27.0% 13.0% 25.0% 15.0% 2.0%
2010/11 4.1% 12.2% 28.6% 17.3% 25.5% 11.2% 1.0%
2011/12 6.3% 14.7% 28.4% 17.9% 12.6% 11.6% 8.4%
2012/13 10.5% 26.3% 21.1% 14.0% 12.3% 12.3% 3.5%
0%
4%
8%
12%
16%
20%
24%
28%
32%
36%
40%
Proportion of Inpatient Admissions for Old Age Psychiatry (OP) by 5 year Age-Bands
97
Table 22: Proportion of inpatient admissions to old age psychiatry 2011/12, compared to Tower
Hamlets population 2011
Ethnic group Percentage
Inpatients Population
White British 63 61
Asian or Asian British - Bangladeshi 17 21
Black or Black British - Caribbean 2 8
All Other Ethnic Groups 18 10
Not stated/unknown 0 Note: the over 65 population figure (8%) includes black African and black Caribbean
This shows that the proportion of inpatients in this service (unlike most other services in this
chapter) does correspond broadly to the proportions in the population.
The inpatient length of stay for older adults has been analysed as set out in the figure below.
Figure 65: Average inpatient length of stay for older adults 2008/2009-2012/201342
The average length of stay for ‘Old Age Psychiatry (OP)’ shows a continuing drop since
2008/09, a fall of over 30% by 2012/13.
42
Average based on the 7 months data available
130 136
119 111
89
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
200
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
Patients Average Length of Stay
Old Age Psychiatry (OP)
98
Older people with dementia may be admitted to a general hospital due to physical illness.
When they are, it is important that hospitals recognise their dementia and ensure appropriate
care and discharge. The following figure shows the increase in liaison referrals.
Figure 66: Referrals to older people’s mental health liaison 2009/13
The increase in referrals implies better recognition and may also mean more admissions.
The following figure shows the spells coded as people with dementia at the Royal London
hospital in Whitechapel.
Figure 67: Spells coded as people with dementia at the Royal London Hospital
Again, this increase may be due to better recognition or more admissions, but it is believed
to be the former.
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
MHCOP Psychiatric Liaison Referrals
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 projected
Spells coded as people with dementia at the Royal London Hospital
99
6.5 Summary of older adult service utilisation
The proportion of people referred to IAPT who are aged over 65 is 2%-3% (from
2010/13) compared with the 7% of the total population aged 66 and over
Over half the external referrals to community services are White, although the
proportion coded ‘Asian Bangladeshi’ community for ‘Old Age Psychiatry’ has
increased in the period.
The average length of time on the community caseload has increased since 2008/09
from 157 days to about 270 days.
More than three in five of those using Old Age Psychiatry community services are
discharged between two to five times in the period.
The number of inpatient admissions has remained steady for older adults, at just over
100 per year. One in five inpatients was admitted more than once.
The average length of stay for ‘Old Age Psychiatry (OP)’ shows a continuing fall
since 2008/09, by 30% to 2012/13.
The number of occupied bed days for assessment for people with dementia has
fallen over the last three years, whilst the spells coded as ‘people with dementia’ at
the royal London Hospital have increased in the last three years.